“…In oscine Passerines (e.g., songbirds), song is a culturally transmitted trait that is acquired through social learning and imitation (Lynch, ). Thus, geographic variation in song can rapidly arise through the interplay of geographic isolation (Laiolo, ; Parker, Anderson, Jenkins, & Brunton, ; Robin, Katti, Purushotham, Sancheti, & Sinha, ; Valderrama, Molles, Waas, & Slabbekoorn, ) and localized generation of novel song elements or “memes” during song learning (Lynch, Plunkett, Baker, & Jenkins, ; Slabbekoorn & Smith, ). Natural (e.g., geographic distance, uninhabitable areas) or anthropogenic barriers (e.g., deforested landscapes, urban development) can resist or prevent meme flow between populations, much in the same way that barriers restrict gene flow (Lynch, ), and over time lead to the formation of unique dialects among populations across a landscape (MacDougall‐Shackleton & MacDougall‐Shackleton, ; Parker et al., ).…”