Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following article in Biology 
Letters.

Wild S, Allen SJ, Krützen M, King SL, Gerber L, Hoppitt WJE. 2019 Multi- 
network-based diffusion analysis reveals vertical cultural transmission of 
sponge tool use within dolphin matrilines. Biol. Lett. 15: 20190227. 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2019.0227
Abstract:
Behavioural differences among social groups can arise from differing ecological 
conditions, genetic predispositions and/or social learning. In the past, social 
learning has typically been inferred as responsible for the spread of behaviour 
by the exclusion of ecological and genetic factors. This ‘method of exclusion’ 
was used to infer that ‘sponging’, a foraging behaviour involving tool use in 
the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) population in Shark Bay, Western 
Australia, was socially transmitted. However, previous studies were limited in 
that they never fully accounted for alternative factors, and that social 
learning, ecology and genetics are not mutually exclusive in causing 
behavioural variation. Here, we quantified the importance of social learning on 
the diffusion of sponging, for the first time explicitly accounting for 
ecological and genetic factors, using a multi-network version of ‘network-based 
diffusion analysis'. Our results provide compelling support for previous 
findings that sponging is vertically socially transmitted from mother to 
(primarily female) offspring. This research illustrates the utility of social 
network analysis in elucidating the explanatory mechanisms behind the 
transmission of behaviour in wild animal populations.

Download here:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsbl.2019.0227

Or email [email protected] to request a PDF. 

Kind regards,

------------------------------------------------
Sonja Wild
 
PhD 
Manton 8.17
School of Biology
University of Leeds
LS2 9JT
Leeds (UK)
[email protected]
www.sharkbaydolphins.org
 





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