Study shows elephants might call each other by name
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[June 11, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Over the years, researchers who study elephants
have noticed an intriguing phenomenon. Sometimes when an elephant makes
a vocalization to a group of other elephants, all of them respond. But
sometimes when that same elephant makes a similar call to the group,
only a single individual responds.
Could it be that elephants address each other by the equivalent of a
name? A new study involving wild African savannah elephants in Kenya
lends support to this idea.
The researchers analyzed vocalizations - mostly rumbles generated by
elephants using their vocal cords, similar to how people speak - made by
more than 100 elephants in Amboseli National Park and Samburu National
Reserve.
Using a machine-learning model, the researchers identified what appeared
to be a name-like component in these calls identifying a specific
elephant as the intended addressee. The researchers then played audio
for 17 elephants to test how they would respond to a call apparently
addressed to them as well as to a call apparently addressed to some
other elephant.
The elephants responded more strongly on average to calls apparently
addressed to them. When they heard such a call, they tended to behave
more enthusiastically, walk toward the audio source and make more
vocalizations than when they heard one apparently meant for someone
else.
The study's findings indicate that elephants "address one another with
something like a name," according to behavioral ecologist Mickey Pardo
of Cornell University and formerly of Colorado State University, lead
author of the study published on Monday in the journal Nature Ecology &
Evolution.
"Certainly, in order to address one another in this way, elephants must
learn to associate particular sounds with particular individuals and
then use those sounds to get the attention of the individual in
question, which requires sophisticated learning ability and
understanding of social relationships," Pardo said.
"The fact that elephants address one another as individuals highlights
the importance of social bonds - and specifically, maintaining many
different social bonds - for these animals," Pardo added.
Elephants, Earth's largest land animals, are highly intelligent, known
to have keen memory and problem-solving skills and sophisticated
communication. Previous research has shown that they engage in
complicated behavior - visual, acoustic and tactile gestures - when
greeting each other.
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A bird perches on an elephant as it walks at the Amboseli National
Park in Kajiado County, Kenya, April 4, 2024. REUTERS/Monicah Mwangi/File
Photo
Why would an elephant call to another elephant by "name"?
"We don't know exhaustively, but from our analysis it appears
commonly during contact calls where an elephant calls to another
individual - often by name," said Colorado State University
conservation biologist and study co-author George Wittemyer, chair
of the scientific board of the conservation group Save the
Elephants.
"It was also common among a mother's rumbles to her calves, often to
calm them down or check in with them. We thought we would find it in
greeting ceremonies, but it was less common in those types of
vocalizations," Wittemyer added.
Using individual-specific vocal labels - names - is rare, but not
unprecedented, in the animal kingdom. Dolphins and parrots have been
shown to do this, too. But when they do it, they just imitate
vocalizations made by the other animal. In elephants, the vocal
labels are not simply imitating the sounds made by the addressee.
"Instead, their names seem to be arbitrary, like human names," Pardo
said. "Addressing individuals with arbitrary names likely requires a
capacity for some degree of abstract thought."
"I think this work highlights how intelligent and interesting
elephants are, and I hope that engenders greater interest in their
conservation and protection," Wittemyer added.
Might people one day be able to "talk" with elephants?
"That would be fantastic, but we are a long way off from that,"
Wittemyer said. "We still don't know the syntax or basic elements by
which elephant vocalizations encode information. We need to figure
that out before we can make deeper progress on understanding them."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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