| Literature DB >> 25851618 |
Ellen C Garland1,2,3, Anne W Goldizen4, Matthew S Lilley5, Melinda L Rekdahl1, Claire Garrigue2,6, Rochelle Constantine2,7, Nan Daeschler Hauser2,8, M Michael Poole2,9, Jooke Robbins2,10, Michael J Noad1,2.
Abstract
For cetaceans, population structure is traditionally determined by molecular genetics or photographically identified individuals. Acoustic data, however, has provided information on movement and population structure with less effort and cost than traditional methods in an array of taxa. Male humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) produce a continually evolving vocal sexual display, or song, that is similar among all males in a population. The rapid cultural transmission (the transfer of information or behavior between conspecifics through social learning) of different versions of this display between distinct but interconnected populations in the western and central South Pacific region presents a unique way to investigate population structure based on the movement dynamics of a song (acoustic) display. Using 11 years of data, we investigated an acoustically based population structure for the region by comparing stereotyped song sequences among populations and years. We used the Levenshtein distance technique to group previously defined populations into (vocally based) clusters based on the overall similarity of their song display in space and time. We identified the following distinct vocal clusters: western cluster, 1 population off eastern Australia; central cluster, populations around New Caledonia, Tonga, and American Samoa; and eastern region, either a single cluster or 2 clusters, one around the Cook Islands and the other off French Polynesia. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that each breeding aggregation represents a distinct population (each occupied a single, terminal node) in a metapopulation, similar to the current understanding of population structure based on genetic and photo-identification studies. However, the central vocal cluster had higher levels of song-sharing among populations than the other clusters, indicating that levels of vocal connectivity varied within the region. Our results demonstrate the utility and value of using culturally transmitted vocal patterns as a way of defining connectivity to infer population structure. We suggest vocal patterns be incorporated by the International Whaling Commission in conjunction with traditional methods in the assessment of structure.Entities:
Keywords: Megaptera novaeangliae; South Pacific; acoustic display; canto; cultivo de ballenas; demostración acústica; estructura poblacional; humpback whale; population structure; song; sur del Pacífico; vocal; whale culture; yubarta
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25851618 DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Biol ISSN: 0888-8892 Impact factor: 6.560