Sometimes when you travel, you still betray where you came from when you open your mouth. The same thing seems to apply to humpback whales: features of their songs can reveal where they originally came from. What's more, when whales travel their songs change as they pick up new tunes from whales they meet that have come from different regions.
"Our best analogy is hit human fashion and pop songs," says Ellen Garland at the University of St Andrews in the UK. The sharing of whale song is a kind of cultural transmission that can give clues about where a whale has travelled along its migration, and where it started out. "We can pinpoint a population a whale has likely come from by what they are singing," she says.
Please, whales, don't swim next to Seoul. I can't take any more k-pop.
See also: phys.org.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 04 2019, @07:52PM (2 children)
I was going to post the names of some M.J. songs, but just the titles in a particular order sounded bad.
(Score: 3, Funny) by PartTimeZombie on Wednesday September 04 2019, @08:18PM (1 child)
I assumed whales are prog rock fans. Songs that go on for hours in weird time signatures.
Do whales smoke a lot of pot? Someone should do a study.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 04 2019, @09:42PM
They only smoke Ahabs.