3.9 Article

The structure of stereotyped calls reflects kinship and social affiliation in resident killer whales (Orcinus orca)

期刊

NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN
卷 97, 期 5, 页码 513-518

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00114-010-0657-z

关键词

Vocal learning; Gene-culture coevolution; Social network; Kin recognition

资金

  1. DAAD-Doktorandenstipendium aus Mitteln des 3
  2. Hochschulsonderprogramms
  3. Marie-Curie Intra-European Fellowship
  4. Natural Environment Research Council [smru10001] Funding Source: researchfish

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A few species of mammals produce group-specific vocalisations that are passed on by learning, but the function of learned vocal variation remains poorly understood. Resident killer whales live in stable matrilineal groups with repertoires of seven to 17 stereotyped call types. Some types are shared among matrilines, but their structure typically shows matriline-specific differences. Our objective was to analyse calls of nine killer whale matrilines in British Columbia to test whether call similarity primarily reflects social or genetic relationships. Recordings were made in 1985-1995 in the presence of focal matrilines that were either alone or with groups with non-overlapping repertoires. We used neural network discrimination performance to measure the similarity of call types produced by different matrilines and determined matriline association rates from 757 encounters with one or more focal matrilines. Relatedness was measured by comparing variation at 11 microsatellite loci for the oldest female in each group. Call similarity was positively correlated with association rates for two of the three call types analysed. Similarity of the N4 call type was also correlated with matriarch relatedness. No relationship between relatedness and association frequency was detected. These results show that call structure reflects relatedness and social affiliation, but not because related groups spend more time together. Instead, call structure appears to play a role in kin recognition and shapes the association behaviour of killer whale groups. Our results therefore support the hypothesis that increasing social complexity plays a role in the evolution of learned vocalisations in some mammalian species.

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