FEBRUARY
6, 2020
Stories
of unique and sentient interactions between elephants and their dead are a
familiar part of the species' lore, but a comprehensive study of these
interactions has been lacking—until now. A recent review of documented field
observations of elephants at carcasses reveals patterns of elephants' behavior
toward their dead, regardless of the strength of former relationships with the
deceased individual.
The
findings, published in the journal Primates, indicate that elephants exhibit
a generalized interest in their dead, even after bodies have long decayed—and
even if the elephants studied were not closely bonded to the dead individual.
The most common behaviors observed were approaching the dead, touching and
examining the carcass.
Elephants also appeared to use their advanced sense of smell to identify dead
individuals, and they were observed vocalizing and attempting to lift or pull
fallen elephants that had just died.
The
research was led by Shifra Goldenberg, Ph.D., from the San Diego Zoo Institute
for Conservation Research and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute,
and George Wittemyer, Ph.D., from Save the Elephants and the Department of
Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology at Colorado State University. The
project was funded by Save the Elephants, the National Science Foundation and
Colorado State University.
The study
consisted of a literature review of 32 original observations of wild elephant
carcasses from 12 distinct sources across Africa. Despite variability across
sources in methodology, some trends were apparent.
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