The following paper has just been published:

 Whitehead, H., J.K.B. Ford and A.G. Horn. 2023. Using culturally transmitted 
behavior to help delineate conservation units for species at risk. Biological 
Conservation


It is open access and available at:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320723003403
[https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0006320723X0007X-cov150h.gif]<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320723003403>
Using culturally transmitted behavior to help delineate conservation units for 
species at 
risk<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006320723003403>
Culture (information or behavior acquired by social learning and shared by 
members of a community) is an inheritance system that that can contribute t…
www.sciencedirect.com



Abstract:

Culture (information or behavior acquired by social learning and shared by 
members of a community) is an inheritance system that that can contribute to 
the designation of conservation units for species at risk. The phenotypic 
diversity produced by culture is of intrinsic value and behaviorally-cohesive 
communities or sets of communities may be suitable candidate conservation 
units. This paper considers how cultural information can contribute to the 
designation of conservation units, in particular when assessing the 
discreteness and/or evolutionarily significance of potential units. Call and 
song dialects are particularly useful for documenting discreteness, while 
differences in seasonal migrations, if consistent, can be evolutionarily 
significant. Distinctions in foraging behavior or diet can suggest discreteness 
and/or evolutionary significance but it is important to show these are not 
environmentally driven. Social and play behavior can also be used to show 
discreteness. In some cases, it may not be clear whether behavioral differences 
are genetically or culturally determined but this may not matter for the 
delineation of conservation units if the behavioral distinctions are heritable. 
Genetic correlations can indicate the stability of culturally-determined 
behavior when transmission processes are parallel (e.g., mitochondrial DNA and 
behavior learned from the mother). The explicit use of cultural data in the 
delineation of conservation units is currently rare, but should increase as 
more detailed and extensive behavioral databases are compiled and analytical 
methods are developed.


Hal Whitehead, Dalhousie University (hwhit...@dal.ca)
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