Abstract

Songbirds learn their songs culturally, through imitating tutors. The vocal culture of a songbird population changes as new song units (syllables) are introduced through immigration, copying errors, and innovation, while other syllables fall out of use. This leads to a diversification of the syllable pool across the species, much like the diversification and spatial patterns of human language. Vocal cultures have been well-studied in male songbirds but have been largely overlooked in females. Here we undertake one of the first comparisons of male and female song cultures across a songbird metapopulation—studying New Zealand bellbirds Anthornis melanura spanning a network of six islands. Having classified 20,700 syllables (702 types), we compare population syllable repertoire sizes and overlap between sites and sexes. We show that males and females—both with complex songs—have distinct song cultures, sharing only 6–26% of syllable types within each site. Furthermore, male and female syllable types can be statistically discriminated based on acoustic properties. Despite diverse syllable repertoires within sites, few syllable types were shared between sites (both sexes had highly distinct site-specific dialects). For the few types shared between sites, sharing decreased with distance only for males. Overall, there was no significant difference between sexes in degree of site–site repertoire overlap. These results suggest different cultural processes at play for the two sexes, underlining the inadequacy of male-centric song research and calling for comparisons of male and female song cultures in many more species.

Highlights

  • Culture is shared information or behaviour acquired through social learning from conspecifics (Dawkins, 1976), involving the transmission of memes by behavioural imitation

  • Despite the high volume of studies on male birdsong culture and dialects (Jenkins, 1978; Whitehead and Rendell, 2014; Aplin, 2019), little is known about female song culture

  • We found no evidence of a difference in repertoire size for males vs. females within sites; 95% confidence intervals overlap for males and females in all cases (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Culture is shared information or behaviour acquired through social learning from conspecifics (Dawkins, 1976), involving the transmission of memes (units of culture) by behavioural imitation. Vocal culture—the social learning of acoustic memes—has so far been observed in songbirds (oscines; Passeri), some suboscines (Procnias spp., Cotingidae), parrots, hummingbirds, cetaceans, elephants, seals, bats, and humans (Paton et al, 1981; Baptista and Schuchmann, 1990; Janik and Slater, 1997; Poole et al, 2005; Sanvito et al, 2007; Catchpole and Slater, 2008; Kroodsma et al, 2013) In these taxa, the vocal repertoire of a population changes as new memes are introduced through immigration, copying errors, and innovation, while other memes fall out of use (Catchpole and Slater, 2008). This is partly due to a northern-hemisphere-biased view of sexual selection that emphasises male-male

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