I've been trying to find the post that mentioned instinct but have failed because this thread is so long -- was it posted by Kamarling? I can't remember -- apologies for that.
It's an interesting question, which I have been turning over. Are instincts coded for in DNA? Does a gene cause a newly-born lamb to quickly stand on its legs and seek out its mother's teat? What about DNA sequences in non-coding (so-called "junk") regions of chromosomes? Do they have something to do with behaviour?
I've been trying to find something useful on the web but so far haven't had much success. There's a tidbit
here (under the heading "Instinctive Behaviour") where it's simply asserted that since instinctive behaviours are inherited, they
must in some way be coded for in DNA, but doesn't seem to offer any evidence for that.
For example, are there any experiments where genes have been knocked out that result in the disappearance of instinctual behaviours? That resulted in, say, lambs that didn't stand up and seek out the teat as soon as they were born?
Trouble is, it's difficult to formulate that question in a pithy way that can be searched for on the Web. A search for "genes that specify instinct" led me to a video by Richard Dawkins:
-- It's another just-so story, with no real evidence for the Baldwin effect. Notice also how he rubbishes Lamarkism: maybe he's not aware of epigenetic discoveries or simply in denial about them? I don't know.
I wonder whether instinctive behaviours
are actually inherited: they could be a property of the whole organism which every member of the species displays once it's been born. The whole idea of "inheritance" is predicated on extending the known principle of genes passing on the ability to execute molecule-level instructions in cells. That doesn't necessarily mean that they govern instinctive behaviours, though.
If anyone can find an experiment that knocks out genes and results in the disappearance of an instinctive behaviour, please link to it and I'll check it out.