Dear MARMAM community, 

My co-authors and I are thrilled to share our new publication in Proceedings of 
the Royal Society B titled “The diffusion of cooperative and solo bubble net 
feeding in Canadian Pacific humpback whales”. The article is Open Access and 
available at: 
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rspb/article/293/2063/20252409/479678/The-diffusion-of-cooperative-and-solo-bubble-net

Citation: Janie Wray, Eadin N. OMahony, Grace Baer, Nicole Robinson, Archie 
Dundas, Oscar E. Gaggiotti, Luke Rendell, Eric M. Keen; The diffusion of 
cooperative and solo bubble net feeding in Canadian Pacific humpback whales. 
Proc Biol Sci 21 January 2026; 293 (2063): 20252409. 
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.2409

Abstract: Animal culture, information and behaviours acquired and shared by 
social learning are a form of biodiversity with intrinsic and practical value. 
Cooperative foraging, a mutualistic resource acquisition behaviour observed 
across diverse taxa, is strongly connected to social networks via behavioural 
states, cues and often social learning, as it typically involves high 
interaction rates. Understanding the distribution, diffusion and learning 
mechanisms of such cooperative behaviours is an important but understudied 
aspect of nonhuman culture. Bubble net feeding ("bubble netting") is a 
specialized foraging technique practised by certain humpback whale (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) populations globally. Over 20 years in the northern Canadian 
Pacific, we observed the diffusion of two forms: cooperative group and 
independent (or “solo") bubble netting. Network-based diffusion analysis - a 
tool to test for social learning - finds strong evidence for social learning of 
bubble netting when the overall social network is used, even after accounting 
for traits such as site fidelity and sex (10.6 x 10^3 to 35.4 x 10^3 times more 
support for social versus asocial learning; p < 0.0001). A homophily check 
using pre-acquisition association data returned ambiguous results, likely due 
to the inherent sociality of this cooperative foraging behaviour. Nonetheless, 
the rapid diffusion of bubble netting is clearly important for population 
viability and should inform conservation planning for this threatened 
population.

Warm wishes,
Eadin OMahony

— 

Dr. Eadin N. OMahony (she/her)

Postdoctoral Researcher | Molecular Ecology
Marine and Freshwater Research Centre,
Atlantic Technological University, Galway, Ireland

Research Consultant | Marine Mammal Behavioural Ecology and Population Genomics,
North Coast Cetacean Society, 
British Columbia, Canada

email: [email protected] 
bluesky: @eadinomahony.bsky.social

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