The following paper has just been published:

Consequences of culturally-driven ecological specialization: Killer whales and 
beyond.

by: Hal Whitehead and John K.B. Ford

Journal of Theoretical Biology 456: 279-294

Abstract:
Culturally-transmitted ecological specialization occurs in killer whales, as 
well as other species. We hypothesize that some of the remarkable demographic 
and ecological attributes of killer whales result from this process. We 
formalize and model (using agent-based stochastic models parametrized using 
killer whale life history) the cultural evolution of specialization by social 
groups, in which a narrowing of niche breadth is spread and maintained in a 
group through social learning. We compare the demographic and ecological 
results of cultural specialization to those of a similar model of 
specialization through natural selection. We found that specialization, through 
either the cultural or natural selection routes, is adaptive in the short term 
with specialization often increasing fitness. Generalization, in contrast, is 
rarely adaptive. The cultural evolution of specialization can lead to increased 
rates of group extirpation. Specialization has little effect on group size b!
 ut tends to reduce population size and resource abundance. While the two 
specialization processes produce similar results, cultural specialization can 
be very much faster. The results are generally consistent with what we know of 
the formation and maintenance of specialist ecotypes in killer whales, and have 
implications for the persistence, nature and ecological effects of these apex 
predators.

You can read a .pdf at: http://whitelab.biology.dal.ca/labpub.htm

Hal Whitehead
Dalhousie University
[email protected]
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