An agent-based model of dialect evolution in killer whales
Authored by Olga A Filatova, Patrick J O Miller
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2015.03.020
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The killer whale is one of the few animal species with vocal dialects
that arise from socially learned group-specific call repertoires. We
describe a new agent-based model of killer whale populations and test a
set of vocal-learning rules to assess which mechanisms may lead to the
formation of dialect groupings observed in the wild. We tested a null
model with genetic transmission and no learning, and ten models with
learning rules that differ by template source (mother or matriline), variation type (random errors or innovations) and type of call change
(no divergence from kin vs. divergence from kin). The null model without
vocal learning did not produce the pattern of group-specific call
repertoires we observe in nature. Learning from either mother alone or
the entire matriline with calls changing by random errors produced a
graded distribution of the call phenotype, without the discrete call
types observed in nature. Introducing occasional innovation or random
error proportional to matriline variance yielded more or less discrete
and stable call types. A tendency to diverge from the calls of related
matrilines provided fast divergence of loose call clusters. A pattern
resembling the dialect diversity observed in the wild arose only when
rules were applied in combinations and similar outputs could arise from
different learning rules and their combinations. Our results emphasize
the lack of information on quantitative features of wild killer whale
dialects and reveal a set of testable questions that can draw insights
into the cultural evolution of killer whale dialects. (C) 2015 Elsevier
Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Convergence
Cultural-evolution
Bottle-nosed dolphins
Bird song dialects
Orcinus-orca
Selective attrition
Tursiops-truncatus
Call
Divergence
Signatures