Finding Points to Role for Genetics in Development of Culture
NEW YORK, May 3, 2009 鈥 In an experiment that points to a role for genetics in the development of culture, biologists at T九色视频 (CCNY) and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have discovered that zebra finches raised in isolation will, over several generations, produce a song similar to that sung by the species in the wild.
According to Dr. Olga Feh茅r, who conducted the experiment for her dissertation at CCNY, first generation male zebra finches raised in isolation produced an unstructured, often abnormal-sounding song that was quite different from the 鈥渨ild-type鈥 song. These birds were paired in a 鈥渢utor-pupil鈥 relationship with a new generation of zebra finches that imitated their tutors鈥 songs, but changed certain characteristics.
The alterations accumulated over generations. By the fourth generation the song had evolved toward the 鈥渨ild-type鈥 song,鈥 Dr. Feh茅r and colleagues report in the May 6 edition of Nature.
鈥淲e were surprised the song reverted back to the wild-type song so fast,鈥 she said.
鈥淐ulture appears to be encoded in the birds. It just needed a few generations to emerge,鈥 said Dr. Ofer Tchernichovski, CCNY Professor of Biology and Dr. Feh茅r鈥檚 thesis adviser. He noted that the same pattern of evolution in the song occurred whether the subsequent generations of male birds were raised among female birds, who do not sing, and siblings in a colony setting or just among isolate males one-on-one.
A similar phenomenon has been observed among deaf children in Nicaragua. There, children developed a rudimentary sign language in the home that spontaneously evolved into a more sophisticated sign language when they were placed in a school with other deaf children.
Dr. Feh茅r concluded the experiment 鈥渋dentified some encoded traits of culture.鈥 This finding could be used to explain why different species develop different song cultures,鈥 Professor Tchernichovski added.
Future research could show whether 鈥渃hanges in gene expression, neuronal reorganization or neurogenesis associated with song development show orderly multigenerational progression during the evolution of song culture.鈥
Co-authors with Dr. Feh茅r and Professor Tchernichovski were Sigal Saar from CCNY and Haibin Wang and Partha P. Mitra from CSHL.
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