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Elephant Social Complexity and Intelligence  

 

Close-up of juvenile elephant with family members

Calves spend most of their time within a body's length of family members.

 

Through opportunities to observe forest elephants, our research program also examines aggression and dominance behaviors in relation to vocal behavior of forest elephants. At Dzanga bai, competition for mineral pits was examined to 1) determine if access to mineral pits is regulated by a dominance hierarchy which can be measured in terms of sex/age class, 2) examine aggressive interactions in relation to elephant density, and 3) examine the incidence, structure, and context of vocalizations associated with aggressive interactions. Preliminary results suggest that only 10% of aggressive interactions result in vocalizations and only 10% of those vocalizations are low frequency calls (Payne et al. in prep). Thus, high frequency calls are more commonly associated with aggressive interactions.

References
Payne, K., A. Turkalo, M. Groo, and M. Thompson. In prep. Dominance relationships in African forest elephants.

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In-Depth

Learn more about the social lives of forest elephants:
View video from the Central African rainforest. (Courtesy of the New York Times)
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Learn more about the greeting ceremonies of elephants:
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Listen to a forest clearing at night, full of forest elephants
Audio>> (Click on Listen to sounds of the bai. courtesy of Radio Expeditions)

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