NEW FULL PAPER AVAILABLE: Monitoring Behaviour in African Elephants during Introduction into a New Group: Differences between Related and Unrelated Animals

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Monitoring Behaviour in African Elephants during Introduction into a New
Group: Differences between Related and Unrelated AnimalsFranziska Hörner,
Ann-Kathrin Oerke, Dennis W. H. Müller, Uta Westerhüs, Idu Azogu-Sepe, Jiri
Hruby & Gela PreisfeldAnimalsOctober 18, 2021Simple Summary

African elephants are highly social animals that perform a so-called
Greeting Ceremony in the wild when meeting elephants they are familiar with
but have not seen for a certain timespan. Until now, it has not been known
whether zoo elephants also show this unique behaviour. Therefore, this
study was designed around the reunifications of two mother–daughter pairs
that had been separated for 2 and 12 years, and two unifications of
unrelated elephants, as a comparison. First contact was conducted in a
protected setting, i.e., there was a fence between the animals to prevent
possible fighting. Signs of the Greeting Ceremony shown by the elephants,
the distance they kept to the separating fence, and the time until the
elephants’ trunks touched for the first time were observed. The results
demonstrate that the related elephants showed all behavioural
characteristic of the Greeting Ceremony, kept close to the fence, and
touched trunks after only a few seconds, while elephants that were not
familiar with each other did not show a full Greeting Ceremony, stayed
further from the fence, and touched trunks for the first time only after
several minutes upon meeting. This study testifies that zoo elephants show
the same typical social behaviour known from wild elephants (namely the
Greeting Ceremony) and, therefore, behave species-specific. It also
confirms the strong family bonds of elephants and the cognitive abilities
of elephants, specifically their long-term social memory.

Abstract

The introduction of elephants into new groups is necessary for breeding
programmes. However, behavioural studies on the reactions of these animals
at first encounters are missing. In the present study, female African
elephants (Loxodonta africana) living in zoos were observed during
unifications with unfamiliar elephants (introduction of two to one females
and one to two females; n = 6) and reunifications with related elephants
(two mother–daughter-pairs; n = 4) that were separated for 2 and 12 years,
respectively. First encounters of the elephants were observed and recorded
by scan sampling. The parameters measured were (a) signs of the
characteristic Greeting Ceremony, (b) distance to the fence separating the
elephants during first contact, and (c) time until trunks touched for the
first time. The data were statistically analysed with SPSS. The results
showed that related elephants performed a full Greeting Ceremony on
reunifications. Unrelated elephants only expressed a minor greeting. During
first encounters, related elephants predominantly showed affiliative
behaviour (p = 0.001), whilst unrelated elephants expressed more agonistic
behaviour (p = 0.001). The distance to the fence was significantly smaller
for related elephants than for unrelated elephants (p = 0.038). First
contact of trunks occurred on average after 3.00 s. in related elephants
and 1026.25 s. in unrelated elephants. These findings indicate that related
elephants recognise their kin after up to 12 years of separation, meet them
with a full Greeting Ceremony during reunification, and seek contact to the
related elephant, while unrelated elephants are hesitant during
unifications with unfamiliar elephants and express more agonistic
behaviour. The results testify that zoo elephants show the same
species-specific social behaviour as their conspecifics in the wild. It
also confirms the cognitive abilities of elephants and the significance of
matrilines for breeding programmes.

FULL PAPER PDF
LINKhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1jVsh-feILhWjOLAHgXRn6GgBmCyR8JF9/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jVsh-feILhWjOLAHgXRn6GgBmCyR8JF9/view?usp=sharing
FULL PAPER WEB LINKhttps://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/11/10/2990/htm
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/11/10/2990/htm

*Monitoring Behaviour in African Elephants during Introduction into a New Group: Differences between Related and Unrelated AnimalsFranziska Hörner, Ann-Kathrin Oerke, Dennis W. H. Müller, Uta Westerhüs, Idu Azogu-Sepe, Jiri Hruby & Gela PreisfeldAnimalsOctober 18, 2021Simple Summary* African elephants are highly social animals that perform a so-called Greeting Ceremony in the wild when meeting elephants they are familiar with but have not seen for a certain timespan. Until now, it has not been known whether zoo elephants also show this unique behaviour. Therefore, this study was designed around the reunifications of two mother–daughter pairs that had been separated for 2 and 12 years, and two unifications of unrelated elephants, as a comparison. First contact was conducted in a protected setting, i.e., there was a fence between the animals to prevent possible fighting. Signs of the Greeting Ceremony shown by the elephants, the distance they kept to the separating fence, and the time until the elephants’ trunks touched for the first time were observed. The results demonstrate that the related elephants showed all behavioural characteristic of the Greeting Ceremony, kept close to the fence, and touched trunks after only a few seconds, while elephants that were not familiar with each other did not show a full Greeting Ceremony, stayed further from the fence, and touched trunks for the first time only after several minutes upon meeting. This study testifies that zoo elephants show the same typical social behaviour known from wild elephants (namely the Greeting Ceremony) and, therefore, behave species-specific. It also confirms the strong family bonds of elephants and the cognitive abilities of elephants, specifically their long-term social memory. *Abstract* The introduction of elephants into new groups is necessary for breeding programmes. However, behavioural studies on the reactions of these animals at first encounters are missing. In the present study, female African elephants (Loxodonta africana) living in zoos were observed during unifications with unfamiliar elephants (introduction of two to one females and one to two females; n = 6) and reunifications with related elephants (two mother–daughter-pairs; n = 4) that were separated for 2 and 12 years, respectively. First encounters of the elephants were observed and recorded by scan sampling. The parameters measured were (a) signs of the characteristic Greeting Ceremony, (b) distance to the fence separating the elephants during first contact, and (c) time until trunks touched for the first time. The data were statistically analysed with SPSS. The results showed that related elephants performed a full Greeting Ceremony on reunifications. Unrelated elephants only expressed a minor greeting. During first encounters, related elephants predominantly showed affiliative behaviour (p = 0.001), whilst unrelated elephants expressed more agonistic behaviour (p = 0.001). The distance to the fence was significantly smaller for related elephants than for unrelated elephants (p = 0.038). First contact of trunks occurred on average after 3.00 s. in related elephants and 1026.25 s. in unrelated elephants. These findings indicate that related elephants recognise their kin after up to 12 years of separation, meet them with a full Greeting Ceremony during reunification, and seek contact to the related elephant, while unrelated elephants are hesitant during unifications with unfamiliar elephants and express more agonistic behaviour. The results testify that zoo elephants show the same species-specific social behaviour as their conspecifics in the wild. It also confirms the cognitive abilities of elephants and the significance of matrilines for breeding programmes. *FULL PAPER PDF LINKhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1jVsh-feILhWjOLAHgXRn6GgBmCyR8JF9/view?usp=sharing <https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jVsh-feILhWjOLAHgXRn6GgBmCyR8JF9/view?usp=sharing> FULL PAPER WEB LINKhttps://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/11/10/2990/htm <https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/11/10/2990/htm>*