2002
DOI: 10.1006/anbe.2002.3012
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Cultural transmission within maternal lineages: vocal clans in resident killer whales in southern Alaska

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Cited by 211 publications
(217 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…In other animal societies, social preference based on tool-use or on socially learned traits per se has not been shown. Although in-group identity, based on socially learned traits, has been proposed for other species, such as group-specific calls in killer whales, Orcinus orca 33,34 and budgerigars, Melopsittacusundulatus 35 , individuals within cultural subgroups exhibit similar calls as a consequence of affiliation. We suggest that spongers also share in-group identity, but affiliation is a consequence of similarity in the socially learned trait, a scenario that resonates with human culture 22 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other animal societies, social preference based on tool-use or on socially learned traits per se has not been shown. Although in-group identity, based on socially learned traits, has been proposed for other species, such as group-specific calls in killer whales, Orcinus orca 33,34 and budgerigars, Melopsittacusundulatus 35 , individuals within cultural subgroups exhibit similar calls as a consequence of affiliation. We suggest that spongers also share in-group identity, but affiliation is a consequence of similarity in the socially learned trait, a scenario that resonates with human culture 22 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ecotypes may also exhibit differences in social structure, morphology, behavior and vocal signatures (see for review de Bruyn et al (2013)). In the North Pacific, the resident and transient ecotypes occupy largely sympatric distribution ranges (Ford et al, 2000), but specialize on very different prey resources (fish and marine mammals, respectively; Ford et al, 1998;Krahn et al, 2007), are genetically differentiated (Hoelzel et al, 1998(Hoelzel et al, , 2002(Hoelzel et al, , 2007, and exhibit different social organization (Ford et al, 2000), mating systems (Pilot et al, 2010) and vocal behavior (Yurk et al, 2002;Deecke et al, 2005). Less is known about the 'offshore' ecotype, however, our data indicate that we need to consider their differentiation in sympatry as well.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An earlier division between fish-eating and marine-mammal-eating ecotypes in pelagic waters is reasonable if the nearshore habitat was unavailable at that time (under ice). Differences in dispersal range, social behavior and prey choice between transients and offshores (Yurk et al, 2002) may have reinforced isolation. We suggest that dependence on learned behavior, likely transferred within social groups by tradition, serves to isolate populations of resource specialists, as discussed previously (Hoelzel et al, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Matrilines that associate over half of the time (based on visual observations at the surface) are considered to belong to the same pod (Bigg et al, 1990) and matrilines and pods sharing elements of their acoustic repertoire are referred to as clans (Ford, 1991;Yurk et al, 2002).…”
Section: Killer Whales As Candidates For Using Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Categorization of calls to type by visual inspection of spectrograms was used here since earlier studies using this approach demonstrated high inter-observer reliability scores and compared favorably to automated approaches involving neural networks (Bain, 1986;Ford, 1991;Deecke et al, 1999;Yurk et al, 2002;Deecke & Janik, 2006). Three observers and I each sorted spectrograms of calls from each recording into our own sets of categories.…”
Section: Call Type Assignmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%