Abstract

Recent work has shown that elaborate secondary sexual traits and the corresponding preferences for them may be transmitted culturally rather than by genetic inheritance. Evidence for such cultural transmission commonly invokes spatial patterns of local similarity, with neighbouring individuals or populations appearing similar to each other. Alternative explanations for local similarity include ecological similarity of neighbouring environments and confounding genetic effects caused by aggregations of kin. We found that bowers built by male spotted bowerbirds, Chlamydera maculata, within a single population showed fine-scale similarities between neighbours in the decorations displayed on them. Such similarities did not covary with local decoration availability, local display environment or kinship and could not be explained by stealing behaviour by neighbours. Instead, we suggest that these similarities are products of local tradition, either culturally transmitted by neighbouring males who regularly inspect neighbours' bowers, or as localized responses to variable individual female preferences.

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