The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs

For more than forty years, the complex songs emitted by humpback whales have fascinated the scientific community as well as the general public. These songs are produced by males during the breeding season, and are hierarchically structured and population specific. Within a population, males tend to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo
Other Authors: Rendell, Luke, Leverhulme Trust
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of St Andrews 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18621
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spelling ftstandrewserep:oai:research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk:10023/18621 2023-07-02T03:32:32+02:00 The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo Rendell, Luke Leverhulme Trust viii,198 p. 2019-10-07T08:39:21Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18621 en eng University of St Andrews The University of St Andrews http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18621 Thesis Doctoral PhD Doctor of Philosophy 2019 ftstandrewserep 2023-06-13T18:30:25Z For more than forty years, the complex songs emitted by humpback whales have fascinated the scientific community as well as the general public. These songs are produced by males during the breeding season, and are hierarchically structured and population specific. Within a population, males tend to conform to the same song type, but songs undergo gradual unidirectional change. Instances of more rapid song changes have also been recorded, where the song sung by a population has been replaced by the song of an adjacent population. The learning mechanisms that concurrently drive song conformity, and simultaneously allow gradual (evolution) and rapid (revolution) song change are not currently understood. This thesis aims to address this gap by using innovative theoretical models as well as more established empirical methods. Chapter 1 provides a general introduction to the thesis topics. In chapter 2 I introduce a spatially explicit agent-based modelling approach to investigate humpback whale song evolution and transmission. I found that shared feeding grounds promote inter-population song transmission, song conformity emerges as a function of breeding ground geographical segregation, and production errors facilitate gradual evolution of songs. In chapter 3, the same modelling approach is extended to simulate song revolutions using a new learning bias in combination with different movement scenarios. I found that the consistent emergence of song revolutions is dependent on cognitive (song memory), behavioural (singing probability) and spatial (agent density) factors. Finally, in chapter 4, I analyse intra- and inter- individual song variability at different hierarchical levels of organisation in songs recorded off eastern Australia. I found that variability is not homogeneously distributed across the different song levels. Furthermore, I identified consistent and distinctive individual patterns of song production consistent with the theory that songs could represent mate quality advertisements for females. "This ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Humpback Whale University of St Andrews: Digital Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Digital Research Repository
op_collection_id ftstandrewserep
language English
description For more than forty years, the complex songs emitted by humpback whales have fascinated the scientific community as well as the general public. These songs are produced by males during the breeding season, and are hierarchically structured and population specific. Within a population, males tend to conform to the same song type, but songs undergo gradual unidirectional change. Instances of more rapid song changes have also been recorded, where the song sung by a population has been replaced by the song of an adjacent population. The learning mechanisms that concurrently drive song conformity, and simultaneously allow gradual (evolution) and rapid (revolution) song change are not currently understood. This thesis aims to address this gap by using innovative theoretical models as well as more established empirical methods. Chapter 1 provides a general introduction to the thesis topics. In chapter 2 I introduce a spatially explicit agent-based modelling approach to investigate humpback whale song evolution and transmission. I found that shared feeding grounds promote inter-population song transmission, song conformity emerges as a function of breeding ground geographical segregation, and production errors facilitate gradual evolution of songs. In chapter 3, the same modelling approach is extended to simulate song revolutions using a new learning bias in combination with different movement scenarios. I found that the consistent emergence of song revolutions is dependent on cognitive (song memory), behavioural (singing probability) and spatial (agent density) factors. Finally, in chapter 4, I analyse intra- and inter- individual song variability at different hierarchical levels of organisation in songs recorded off eastern Australia. I found that variability is not homogeneously distributed across the different song levels. Furthermore, I identified consistent and distinctive individual patterns of song production consistent with the theory that songs could represent mate quality advertisements for females. "This ...
author2 Rendell, Luke
Leverhulme Trust
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo
spellingShingle Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo
The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
author_facet Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo
author_sort Lamoni, Luca Ubaldo
title The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
title_short The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
title_full The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
title_fullStr The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
title_full_unstemmed The role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
title_sort role of individual behaviour in the collective cultural evolution of humpback whale songs
publisher University of St Andrews
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18621
op_coverage viii,198 p.
genre Humpback Whale
genre_facet Humpback Whale
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10023/18621
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