Animal culture could help conservation
Experts say the habits of animals should be factored into conservation efforts.
Conservation practice in the past has been guided by genetics and ecology that assess how unique or connected different groups of animals are.
However, new research shows that social learning and animal culture could guide effective conservation strategies too.
Scientists have come up with a ‘roadmap’ to help conservationists make the best decisions when implementing measures to help save them.
Like humans, species such as elephants, chimpanzees and whales learn from each other. For example, meerkat pups learn how to hunt scorpions by copying adults, and whales learn migratory routes from their mothers. Over time, learned behaviour can create differences between groups of animals which shape how they forage, migrate and communicate.
Beyond conserving genetic diversity, the authors of the roadmap argue that understanding these socially learned behavioural differences between groups can guide decisions on how to define units (groups) to protect.
It can also inform practical conservation measures, such as teaching anti-predator behaviours, or even seeding migratory routes for animals undergoing reintroduction to the wild.
“By conserving the ability of populations and groups of animals to socially learn, we help ensure they have the ability to rapidly learn how to exploit new food or habitat resources,” says researcher Dr Emma Carroll from the University of Auckland.
“Conversely, some species are culturally ‘conservative’ which may mean they focus on key resources, like particular types of food that need to be conserved.”
For example, socially learned migration routes by beluga whales may be important to prevent entrapment in sea ice; understanding how crop-raiding behaviour in elephants is spread across social groups can assist in the management of these behaviours; and social learning may even provide opportunities for rapid assessment, for example in New Caledonian crows, where vocal dialects may provide ‘markers’ for rapidly mapping variation in tool-assisted foraging behaviour.
Efforts are already being made, such as the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) – widely known as the Bonn Convention – which operates under the aegis of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). This has been a pioneer in efforts to use scientific knowledge on animal cultures to improve the conservation of migratory species.