One of the most remarkable things about our species is how fast human culture
can change. New words can spread from continent to continent, while
technologies such as cellphones and drones change the way people live around
the world.
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It turns out that humpback whales have their own
long-range, high-speed cultural evolution, and they do not need the internet or
satellites to keep it running.
In a study published last Tuesday, scientists found
that humpback songs easily spread from one population to another across the
Pacific Ocean. It can take just a couple of years for a song to move several
thousand miles.
Ellen Garland, a marine biologist at the University
of St. Andrews in Scotland and an author of the study, said she was shocked to
find whales off Australia passing their songs to others in French Polynesia,
which in turn transmitted songs to whales off Ecuador.
“Half the globe is now vocally connected for
whales,” she said. “And that’s insane.”
It’s even possible that the songs travel around the
entire Southern Hemisphere. Preliminary studies by other scientists are
revealing that whales in the
Atlantic Ocean pick up songs from whales in the
eastern Pacific.
Each population of humpback whales spends the winter
in the same breeding grounds. The males there sing loud underwater songs that
can last up to half an hour. Males in the same breeding ground sing a nearly
identical tune. And from one year to the next, the population’s song gradually
evolves into a new melody.
Garland and other researchers have uncovered a
complex, language-like structure in these songs. The whales combine short
sounds, which scientists call units, into phrases. They then combine the
phrases into themes. And each song is composed of several themes.
Male humpbacks sometimes change a unit in their
song. Sometimes they add a new phrase or chop out a theme. The other males may
then copy it. These embellishments cause the population’s song to gradually evolve,
resulting in drastically different melodies from one population to the next.
I think that will definitely be the next step, if we can find enough data to compare
Michael Noad, a marine biologist at the University
of Queensland, discovered that a population’s song can sometimes make a sudden,
dramatic change. In 1996, he and his colleagues noticed that a male on the east
coast of Australia had given up the local song and was now singing a tune that
matched one previously sung on the west coast of the country.
Within two years, all the males on the east coast
were singing that song. Noad’s landmark study was the first to discover this
kind of cultural revolution in any animal species.
Garland earned her doctoral degree with Noad in the
early 2000s, recording humpback songs in breeding grounds farther east in the
Pacific Ocean. When she compared their songs, she found the same pattern as
Noad had: Songs sung among the eastern Australia population showed up within a
couple of years in
French Polynesia about 9,600km away.
After publishing that initial discovery in 2011,
Garland continued to record humpback whales on the same breeding grounds. She
also wondered if their songs were spreading farther east across the Pacific.
An opportunity to find out arrived when Judith
Denkinger and Javier Oña, marine biologists at the University of San Francisco
de Quito in Ecuador, offered to collaborate. They study humpback whales that
breed along the coast of Ecuador.
For their new study, Denkinger and Oña recorded
humpback whales from 2016 to 2018. Over the same period, Michael Poole, a
marine biologist at the Marine Mammal Research Program on the French Polynesian
island of Moorea, recorded whales there.
The researchers set up anchored underwater
microphones that could eavesdrop on whales passing through. They also followed
whales by boat, sticking microphones into the water to catch their songs.
It’s possible, but there’s a data gap in the Indian Ocean,
In 2016 and 2017, the two populations of whales had
clearly distinct songs. But in 2018, a revolution happened: The whales off
Ecuador were putting French Polynesian themes in their songs.
The scientists reported their findings in the
journal Royal Society Open Science.
Elena Schall, a postdoctoral researcher at the
Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven,
Germany, who was not involved in the
study, said that she is seeing some similar patterns in the Atlantic Ocean.
Humpback whales off the coast of Brazil and South Africa are picking up themes
previously recorded off the coast of Ecuador.
It is conceivable,
Schall said, that songs flow all the way around the Southern Hemisphere. “It’s
possible, but there’s a data gap in the Indian Ocean,” she said. “I think that
will definitely be the next step, if we can find enough data to compare.”
Garland and Schall agreed that the songs are most
likely spreading as humpbacks leave their breeding grounds and migrate to
foraging grounds close to Antarctica. On that journey, a male humpback may end
up swimming alongside males from another population. When they hear his
radically different song, they may borrow some themes or steal the entire song.
They will keep singing their new song when they return to their breeding
grounds.
As for why songs mainly flow from west to east,
Garland said it might be because of the huge size of the humpback population
around Australia. The chances of a whale from that population veering off
course to the east are greater than one straying the other way.
Schall, on the other hand, suspects the clockwise
flow of water around Antarctica — known as the Antarctic Circumpolar Current —
is at least partly responsible. A male humpback that gets separated from his
migrating population may just drift east with the current until he encounters
other whales.
“I could imagine it’s maybe this, but of course it’s
hard to prove,” Schall said.
To fully understand the remarkable spread of
humpback whale songs, researchers will need to figure out why they sing in the
first place. Many researchers suspect that humpback songs are like bird songs,
serving to attract females to males.
For now, that’s just a hypothesis. Ornithologists
have demonstrated that a male bird’s song is crucial to his reproductive
success. But it is a lot harder to track the mating habits of a male humpback
on the high seas.
Embellishing a song may be a way for him to stand out.
“There’s this drive to novelty,” Garland said. “Whether females like it is the
big question.”
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