Illustrations of frequent body act types used by semi-captive African savannah elephants during greeting. The signaler (right) is displayed using different body act types in the panels: a Ear-Spread, Tail-Waggling, and Trunk-Shaking; b Ears-Stiff, Back-Towards, and Tail-on-Side; c Ear-Flapping, Trunk-Reach, and Tail-Raise. Illustrations were drawn by Megan Pacifici. Credit: Communications Biology (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-06133-5
A
team of animal behaviorists from the University of Vienna, the University of
Portsmouth, Elephant CREW, Jafuta Reserve and the University of St Andrews has
found that elephants use gestures and vocal cues when they greet one another.
In their study, published in the journal Communications
Biology, the group observed a month's worth of greetings between
African elephants living in the Jafuta Reserve in Zimbabwe in 2021.
Prior research has shown that elephants
are highly intelligent, ranking close to dolphins. They also have complex
matriarchal social structures. For this new study, the research team wondered
if elephants have ways to communicate with one another that had not been
observed during prior research efforts. They embarked on an observational study focused on elephant greetings.
The researchers ventured into the field
at the reserve in Zimbabwe and watched and recorded encounters between
elephants for one month in 2021. They observed 1,014 physical actions taken by
elephants engaged in a greeting and 268 vocalizations.
The researchers found that elephants
place importance on greeting one another. When two elephants who have not seen
each other for a while meet, they both engage in apparently meaningful
behavior. Gestures included swinging the trunk or using it to touch,
ear-flapping and ear-s
Example of a greeting event between a male and a
female elephant. Credit: Communications Biology (2024). DOI:
10.1038/s42003-024-06133-5
The research team noted that
rumblings and gestures were often combined. Behaviors during greetings also
sometimes involved urination, defecation and secreting sweat in the temporal
gland, which emits odors into the air.
The researchers also found that the
type of behaviors differed depending on whether the two elephants were looking
at one another—most were more likely to engage in gestures when they knew the
other elephant was looking at them. To get the attention of elephants who
hadn't noticed them, they were also seen to engage in ear-flapping, which
generates a lot of noise.
The research team concludes that the gestures and vocalizations used by the elephants appear to be part of a complicated system of communication used by the elephants to convey information during encounters.
by Bob Yirka , Phys.org
Source: Elephants use gestures and vocal cues when greeting each other, study reports (phys.org)
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