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De novo establishment of wild-type song culture in the zebra finch
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Fehér, Olga, Wang, Haibin, Saar, Sigal, Mitra, Partha P. and Tchernichovski, Ofer (2009) De novo establishment of wild-type song culture in the zebra finch. Nature, 459 (7246). pp. 564-568. doi:10.1038/nature07994 ISSN 0028-0836.
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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature07994
Abstract
Culture is typically viewed as consisting of traits inherited epigenetically, through social learning. However, cultural diversity has species-typical constraints1, presumably of genetic origin. A celebrated, if contentious, example is whether a universal grammar constrains syntactic diversity in human languages2. Oscine songbirds exhibit song learning and provide biologically tractable models of culture: members of a species show individual variation in song3 and geographically separated groups have local song dialects4,5. Different species exhibit distinct song cultures6,7, suggestive of genetic constraints8,9. Without such constraints, innovations and copying errors should cause unbounded variation over multiple generations or geographical distance, contrary to observations9. Here we report an experiment designed to determine whether wild-type song culture might emerge over multiple generations in an isolated colony founded by isolates, and, if so, how this might happen and what type of social environment is required10. Zebra finch isolates, unexposed to singing males during development, produce song with characteristics that differ from the wild-type song found in laboratory11 or natural colonies. In tutoring lineages starting from isolate founders, we quantified alterations in song across tutoring generations in two social environments: tutor–pupil pairs in sound-isolated chambers and an isolated semi-natural colony. In both settings, juveniles imitated the isolate tutors but changed certain characteristics of the songs. These alterations accumulated over learning generations. Consequently, songs evolved towards the wild-type in three to four generations. Thus, species-typical song culture can appear de novo. Our study has parallels with language change and evolution12,13,14. In analogy to models in quantitative genetics15,16, we model song culture as a multigenerational phenotype partly encoded genetically in an isolate founding population, influenced by environmental variables and taking multiple generations to emerge.
Item Type: | Journal Article | ||||||||
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Divisions: | Faculty of Science, Engineering and Medicine > Science > Psychology | ||||||||
Journal or Publication Title: | Nature | ||||||||
Publisher: | Nature Publishing | ||||||||
ISSN: | 0028-0836 | ||||||||
Official Date: | 28 May 2009 | ||||||||
Dates: |
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Volume: | 459 | ||||||||
Number: | 7246 | ||||||||
Page Range: | pp. 564-568 | ||||||||
DOI: | 10.1038/nature07994 | ||||||||
Status: | Peer Reviewed | ||||||||
Publication Status: | Published |
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