Dear MarMam
I'm pleased to announce the following multi-authored, open access paper in 
Proceeding B on animal culture and conservation. Whilst a cross-taxa 
publication, it may be of interest to many on this list:

A deepening understanding of animal culture suggests lessons for conservation
Philippa Brakes, Emma L. Carroll, Sasha R. X. Dall, Sally A. Keith, Peter K. 
McGregor, Sarah L. Mesnick, Michael J. Noad, Luke Rendell, Martha M. Robbins, 
Christian Rutz, Alex Thornton, Andrew Whiten, Martin J. Whiting, Lucy M. Aplin, 
Stuart Bearhop, Paolo Ciucci, Vicki Fishlock, John K. B. Ford, Giuseppe 
Notarbartolo di Sciara, Mark P. Simmonds, Fernando Spina, Paul R. Wade, Hal 
Whitehead, James Williams and Ellen C. Garland
Proc. R. Soc. B.288: 20202718
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2020.2718

Abstract
A key goal of conservation is to protect biodiversity by supporting the 
long-term persistence of viable, natural populations of wild species. 
Conservation practice has long been guided by genetic, ecological and 
demographic indicators of risk. Emerging evidence of animal culture across 
diverse taxa and its role as a driver of evolutionary diversification, 
population structure and demographic processes may be essential for augmenting 
these conventional conservation approaches and decision-making. Animal culture 
was the focus of a ground-breaking resolution under the Convention on the 
Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), an international 
treaty operating under the UN Environment Programme. Here, we synthesize 
existing evidence to demonstrate how social learning and animal culture 
interact with processes important to conservation management. Specifically, we 
explore how social learning might influence population viability and be an 
important resource in response to anthropogenic change, and provide examples of 
how it can result in phenotypically distinct units with different, socially 
learnt behavioural strategies. While identifying culture and social learning 
can be challenging, indirect identification and parsimonious inferences may be 
informative. Finally, we identify relevant methodologies and provide a 
framework for viewing behavioural data through a cultural lens which might 
provide new insights for conservation management.


This paper is a follow-on from a Science article by the same group, published 
in 2019:
Animal Cultures Matter for Conservation
Science  08 Mar 2019: Vol. 363, Issue 6431, pp. 1032-1034 DOI: 
10.1126/science.aaw3557
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/363/6431/1032

Abstract
Animal culture, defined as "information or behavior-shared within a 
community-which is acquired from conspecifics through some form of social 
learning" (1), can have important consequences for the survival and 
reproduction of individuals, social groups, and potentially, entire populations 
(1, 2). Yet, until recently, conservation strategies and policies have focused 
primarily on broad demographic responses and the preservation of genetically 
defined, evolutionarily significant units. A burgeoning body of evidence on 
cultural transmission and other aspects of sociality (3) is now affording 
critical insights into what should be conserved (going beyond the protection of 
genetic diversity, to consider adaptive aspects of phenotypic variation), and 
why specific conservation programs succeed (e.g., through facilitating the 
resilience of cultural diversity) while others fail (e.g., by neglecting key 
repositories of socially transmitted knowledge). Here, we highlight how 
international legal instruments, such as the Convention on the Conservation of 
Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), can facilitate smart, targeted 
conservation of a wide range of taxa, by explicitly considering aspects of 
their sociality and cultures.

Kind regards

Philippa Brakes
Research Fellow


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