| Literature DB >> 21497089 |
Ellen C Garland1, Anne W Goldizen, Melinda L Rekdahl, Rochelle Constantine, Claire Garrigue, Nan Daeschler Hauser, M Michael Poole, Jooke Robbins, Michael J Noad.
Abstract
Cultural transmission, the social learning of information or behaviors from conspecifics, is believed to occur in a number of groups of animals, including primates, cetaceans, and birds. Cultural traits can be passed vertically (from parents to offspring), obliquely (from the previous generation via a nonparent model to younger individuals), or horizontally (between unrelated individuals from similar age classes or within generations). Male humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) have a highly stereotyped, repetitive, and progressively evolving vocal sexual display or "song" that functions in sexual selection (through mate attraction and/or male social sorting). All males within a population conform to the current version of the display (song type), and similarities may exist among the songs of populations within an ocean basin. Here we present a striking pattern of horizontal transmission: multiple song types spread rapidly and repeatedly in a unidirectional manner, like cultural ripples, eastward through the populations in the western and central South Pacific over an 11-year period. This is the first documentation of a repeated, dynamic cultural change occurring across multiple populations at such a large geographic scale.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21497089 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2011.03.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834