“…The Banks and Guilford study has obvious relevance to any species whose members travel in groups and is particularly innovative, since animal movement patterns present many fascinating questions regarding potential traditions. For example, little is currently known about the precise role of social (and individual) learning, relative to genetically encoded direction preferences (Helbig, 1991;Mukhin, Kosarev, & Ktitorov, 2005;Plotkin, Byles, Rostal, & Owens, 1995) in the establishment, maintenance, and fine-tuning of migration routes in annual long-distance migrants that travel in mixed-age, mixed-sex, and mixed-experience groups. The fact that novel migration routes can evolve rapidly (Berthold, Helbig, Mohr, & Querner, 1992) reinforces the message that genetic adaptations may evolve quickly and should not be excluded as an explanation for the appearance of novel behavior patterns.…”