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Catchiest Mating Songs Spread Through Whale Populations Like Top 40 Hits

Discover how whale songs reveal cultural transmission among humpback whale populations during the breeding season. Don't miss this phenomenon!

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All the single ladies, all the single ladies...

Whales catch earworms, too, show scientists from the University of Queensland in Australia in a new study

. Each breeding season, males start out singing a new tune, which might incorporate bits of golden oldies or be entirely fresh. These new songs are then passed from whale to whale for 4,000 miles, usually starting from the western edge of the Pacific near Australia, a veritable humpback metropolis, to French Polynesia in the east, a comparative hinterland: a possible cetacean case of cultural trends starting in the big city and propagating to the country. Another hypothesis from the Hairpin

:

What if Michael Jackson was reincarnated as a whale and is now living off the coast of eastern Australia?

This MJ-style spread of songs is cultural transmission on a massive scale, a scale that hasn’t been seen beyond humans before. Over the course ...

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