Trackways freeze time to reveal ancient elephant sociality

An artist's reconstruction of what the ancient herd may have looked like, here showing Stegotetrabelodon

The evolution of behavior is tricky to study for one very simple reason: behaviors usually don’t fossilize.  While anatomy can be reconstructed based on skeletal remains and imprints, how might one glimpse how a living, breathing organism behaved millions of years ago?

Sometimes the animals themselves may be buried while performing certain actions – two dinosaurs locked in combat, or a mother sitting on her clutch of eggs.  Such findings are rare and exquisite. Alternatively, animals may leave behind traces of their handiwork – nests, hives, burrows.  These are objects that testify to the skills of their makers, sometimes termed an ‘extended phenotype‘ – the outward expression of a behavioral program that may be encoded by genes.

Occasionally, one finds evidence of the behavior of an entire group of animals.  Dinosaur trackways discovered around the world reveal many amazing insights, such as the fact that some long-necked sauropod dinosaurs moved in herds, much as modern-day elephants do.  Perhaps they enjoyed a social life that was as interesting.  But clues to the behavior of ancient elephants themselves had not come to light — until now.

An exciting discovery comes from a site called Mleisa in the United Arab Emirates.  The trackway shows 13 individuals travelling mostly parallel to one another, and a 14th individual passing through diagonally. Their distinctive saucer-like shape identifies them as proboscideans, the clade to which all elephants belong.  The Asian and African elephants are thought to have diverged from their common ancestor about six million years ago.  This site dates back to just about that period – approximately 6-8million years.  That means these tracks may belong to an ancestor of the elephants, or one of its contemporaries.

An aerial photo of the trackway (left) and a reconstruction of individual paths (right).

Based on the sizes of individual footprints, and the distances between them, the researchers were able to estimate the height and weight of the animals that made these impressions.  These humble measurements turn out to be quite revealing.

First, the body sizes of these animals are comparable to that of modern elephants, but the largest of them are larger than the species living today.  Second, the parallel tracks seldom intersect, suggesting that tracks resulted from animals were all travelling side-by-side as a group, rather than the result of multiple crossings by single individuals. Third, tracks of the lone individual are larger than the tracks occurring as a group.  This suggests the former is a male.  But the size difference between the male and the others is not as great as the size difference between males and females in the present-day species, leading the authors to suggest either that the difference between sexes was not as large in the ancient species, or that the male was not fully grown.  I think a third possible explanation is that perhaps the herd itself had some young males in it. Finally, the trackways also have a few very small individuals, suggestive of calves.

The size of the elephant group is within the range of group sizes reported for modern African elephants.  If the interpretation that the herd is composed mostly of females while the lone track is a male is correct, it means that ancestral elephants themselves lived in a manner strikingly similar to their living counterparts, who also exhibit such a difference between the sexes.  Most clearly, the site shows that the social system of elephants has a long history.

ResearchBlogging.orgBibi, F., Kraatz, B., Craig, N., Beech, M., Schuster, M., & Hill, A. (2012). Early evidence for complex social structure in Proboscidea from a late Miocene trackway site in the United Arab Emirates Biology Letters DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.1185

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If you’ve seen one elephant, have you seen them all?

“A horse is a horse” – but is any elephant just another elephant?

A cladogram showing the relationships between the African elephants (genus Loxodonta), Asian elephants (genus Elephas) and pleistocene woolly mammoths (genus Mammuthus) based on the hyoid bone, which is located in the neck. Figure from Shoshani & Tassy 2004.

Few people realize that Asian and African elephants are about as different from one another as we are from chimpanzees.  That’s not an exaggeration – the estimated time that they diverged from a common ancestor is about six million years ago [1], whereas humans and chimpanzees are estimated to have diverged between five to six million years ago [2].  Some have even suggested that Asian elephants may be more closely related to woolly mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius).

It’s ok if this surprises you – the elephants may appear to resemble one another more closely in appearance and sound than humans and chimpanzees.

But what about their behavior?   Continue reading

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The Twilight Visit of Ghost

*Note from SdS: the following is an account based on Sameera’s experience.  I’ve come to think of this mysterious tusker as ‘Ghost’ because we so rarely see him and know so little about him. The name has stuck in my head, so that’s going to be his nickname from now on.

- 27 November 2011 -

It was about 2 o’clock in the morning when I woke up to the sound of something brushing past the pipes outside.  It was near the water tank.  As I listened harder, I began to make out a distinctive sound – an elephant eating.

Walking over to the window, I could just make out the dark bulk of a big male.  I was by myself in the field station, sleepy and tired, but very quickly I became alert.  Our housekeeper, who usually sleeps on a bed on the porch, had gone home for the weekend.  I was glad about this because I thought he surely would have turned on the lights and scared off our visitor.

Tusker "209" which seems to have been translocated into Uda Walawe National Park in early 2010.

For months we had seen and heard evidence of elephants breaking through the electric fence, but despite numerous attempts they were impossible to find and track down once they got into the sugar cane across the road.  There were at least four elephants responsible, people thought.  At least one of them was a one-tusked male.  We suspected it was an animal that had been translocated into the park last year, but had not been able to verify this. This was an important chance to catch one of the culprits in the act. Continue reading

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Join The Elephant March – Say NO To Ivory!

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10 Days Left To Help Elephants & Us!

Haven’t gotten around visiting our RocketHub fundraiser page yet?  There’s still time!  But hurry – we’ve only got till December 15th!

Many thanks to Marion Bricaud all the way from France for donating this lovely artwork (check out more of her art at http://polymorphicgirl.deviantart.com/)!

Art by Marion Bricaud © 2011 http://polymorphicgirl.deviantart.com/

That’s what you’ll get if you donate at the $150 level (without the watermark, of course).  I’ve also added another reward at $250 – an original ink elephant drawing by yours truly!  There are lots of rewards at levels above and below this, so check them out & help us help elephants:

http://www.rockethub.com/projects/3707-helping-elephants-and-people-coexist

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Sharing Shade

I spend a lot of time looking at elephant photos.  Now and then, I see something that makes me smile.  I just came across a set of pictures from back in May of 2009, which prompted this post.

One of the neatest things about the elephants at Uda Walawe is how habituated many of them are.  What does habituation mean?  When studying an animal’s behavior, it’s important that the presence of an observer doesn’t change its behavior.  It has to go about its business as if you weren’t there – or at least, not minding your intrusion.  Unhabituated animals are fearful, and we can easily tell that some of the elephants in Uda Walawe are not used to people at all.  But others we know very well – and maybe, they know us too?

The S unit is one such group.  The ‘S’ stands for Seenuggala, which is the name of a little reservoir inside the park around which we frequently see them.  This is one of the largest social units in our study.  One hot morning in May of 2009, we came across them scattered about under trees trying to avoid the sun, as elephants do in the middle of the day.  We ourselves pulled up to some shade by the side of the road, from where we could watch them.  We knocked off the engine and waited.

The ellies and we, escaping the heat beneath the same tree.

Sarika (left) and Sandhapani (right) each with a gray lump of a calf underfoot.

Two adult females and their calves ambled over to us eventually and stood watching.  One was Sandhapani, who we suspect is one of the two oldest females in this group, and has a boisterous male calf almost as big as herself.  The other was Sarika, a younger female with very striking nearly symmetric branch-like veins in both ears and two calves of her own.  After contemplating us for a while, the little ones decided it was time for a nap and lay down less than a meter from us, while their mothers stood drowsily by.  It’s always the littlest ones that are the first to go. It may seem that elephants, like horses, would sleep standing up.  Often, they do nap on their feet.  But when they feel really really safe, they collapse in a heap and sleep on their sides.  Even the grown-ups. The most moving demonstration of this trust is when an animal drops its guard long enough to allow itself or its young to fall asleep in your presence.

Continue reading

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We’re part of the #SciFund challenge!

There are at least two kinds of science today – a) the kind that requires millions of dollars, a small army of techs and postdocs, and many fancy doo-dats or whatsits and b)everything else. The latter doesn’t do too well in today’s funding climate, which is geared toward funding BIG EXPENSIVE science. A small group of scientists – mostly students – are trying to change all that by appealing directly to the public to fund small, very cool, science projects and earn a nifty little reward of thanks. The projects are diverse – everything from zombie fish to next-generation algae technology.  The result: The #SciFund Challenge! Help us help elephants – and help science along the way!

WANT TO HELP?

http://www.rockethub.com/projects/3707-help-us-help-elephants-people-in-sri-lanka

Please share the link above to help us reach our goal!

Check out all the other projects here:

http://www.rockethub.com/projects/scifund

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The Magnificence of Mud

It’s October, and the monsoon is in full force.  As we wrote in an earlier post the elephants love mud.  They’re just oversized piggies with big floppy ears.  Here’s a video for your amusement:

Why do they love mud so much?  As anyone who has seen or enjoyed a muddy spa retreat can tell you, it’s good for the skin and helps with thermoregulation.  Because elephants don’t sweat, when it’s hot outside the evaporating mud cools them off.  Rudyard Kipling so mischievously wrote in ‘The Elephant’s Child’:

‘Don’t you think the sun is very hot here?’ [says the Rock Python]

‘It is,’ said the Elephant’s Child, and before he thought what he was doing he schlooped up a schloop of mud from the banks of the great grey-green, greasy Limpopo, and slapped it on his head, where it made a cool schloopy-sloshy mud-cap all trickly behind his ears. Continue reading

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The Social Lives of Asian Elephants

Kanthi (far left) and Kamala (far right) were the most inseparable pair of elephants we saw during the study. Members of their social group, the K unit, were often together whenever they were seen. Yet not all social units were so tightly knit, with individuals being scattered into small groups quite far apart.

Male and female Asian elephants form distinct parallel societies in which adult females and calves move together and form visible groups whereas adult males are typically more solitary.  For many years there have been two somewhat conflicting characterizations of female Asian elephant society.  The classic view, popularly held, is that Asian elephants form very tightly-bonded families centered around older adult females known as matriarchs.  This view is adapted wholesale from the many excellent long-term studies of African savannah elephants [1-3], which do exhibit this type of social organization. Continue reading

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The Dharmaloka School Nature Society takes a field trip


The school nature society and its teachers.

It’s 6:30 am when we pull up to the school, to be greeted by a gaggle of anxious students and parents.  Today we’re taking four jeeps, five teachers, the four of us, and a little over thirty kids who are part in the schools new ‘Nature Society,’ into the park on a field trip.  The youngest is just 11 years old, while most are 16 or 17. Continue reading

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