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http://www.GeoChemBio.com: Elephants Taxonomy Brief facts Elephant cognition Comparison of African and Asian elephants Developmental stages Images References Taxonomy cellular organisms - Eukaryota - Fungi/Metazoa group - Metazoa - Eumetazoa - Bilateria - Coelomata - Deuterostomia - Chordata - Craniata - Vertebrata - Gnathostomata - Teleostomi - Euteleostomi - Sarcopterygii - Tetrapoda - Amniota - Mammalia - Theria - Eutheria - Afrotheria - Proboscidea Brief facts General information Elephants (order Proboscidea), largest terrestrial mammals, are characterized by columnar limbs, bulky bodies, and elongated snouts (trunks). There are only three surviving species of the order Proboscidea: Elephas maximus (Asian elephant), Loxodonta africana (African savannah elephant or African plains elephant), and Loxodonta cyclotis (African forest elephant).

Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

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Page 1: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

http://www.GeoChemBio.com:

Elephants

● Taxonomy

● Brief facts

● Elephant cognition

● Comparison of African and Asian elephants

● Developmental stages

● Images

● References

Taxonomy

cellular organisms - Eukaryota - Fungi/Metazoa group - Metazoa - Eumetazoa - Bilateria - Coelomata - Deuterostomia - Chordata - Craniata - Vertebrata - Gnathostomata - Teleostomi - Euteleostomi - Sarcopterygii - Tetrapoda - Amniota - Mammalia - Theria - Eutheria - Afrotheria - Proboscidea

Brief facts

● General information

Elephants (order Proboscidea), largest terrestrial mammals, are characterized by columnar limbs, bulky bodies, and elongated snouts (trunks). There are only three surviving species of the order Proboscidea: Elephas maximus (Asian elephant), Loxodonta africana (African savannah elephant or African plains elephant), and Loxodonta cyclotis (African forest elephant).

Page 2: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

Other famous representatives of the order, such as mastodon (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean Eritherium azzouzorum, dated about 60 million years ago (MYA), were found in Morocco (Africa). The estimated body mass of these animals varies between 3 and 8 kg (6.5 - 17.5 lbs).

● Aquatic origin of elephants

There are many indications that elephants have aquatic ancestors:

❍ Elephants exhibit snorkeling behavior. Elephants can snorkel through their trunks while completely submerged below the surface of water. Trunk develops on very early stages of embryo, which indicates its very ancient origin.

❍ The elephant is the only mammal whose pleural cavity (a space between the two layers of the pleura) is completely obliterated by loose connective tissue, thus protecting blood vessels from rupturing under pressure during snorkeling and drinking through the trunk.

❍ Elephant's testes do not descend into a scrotum during embryonic development and remain intra-abdominal after birth. This feature is characteristic to aquatic mammals, whose testes need to be protected from the cold. Elephants and dugongs are primary testicond mammals (their testes never have been scrotal), whereas seals and whales are secondary testiconda (their testes once have been scrotal, but were subsequently withdrawn back into abdominal cavity in the course of the evolution).

❍ One of the striking features that is not seen in other mammalian embryos and indicates aquatic ancestry of the elephants is the development of nephrostomes (connections between the fetal kidney and the coelomic cavity). Nephrostomes are a characteristic feature of the mesonephric kidneys of freshwater vertebrates such as sturgeons and frogs.

❍ Dentition, anatomy of the middle ears, immunological and molecular evidence strongly suggests that the elephant (order Proboscidea) and the sea cow (Sirenia) must share a common ancestor.

● Distribution

❍ African savannah elephant: south of the Sahara Desert to

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the south tip of Africa, from the Atlantic coast (west) of Africa to the Indian Ocean (east).

❍ African forest elephant: dense rainforests of Congo and other Central and West African states.

❍ Asian elephant: parts of India and Southeast Asia, including Sumatra and Borneo. Wild Asian elephants are rare and endangered.

● Eating habits

In nature, elephants consume food with the lowest concentration of calories and protein of any mammalian species. They spend about 60-80% of each 24-h day foraging on savannah and forest vegetation. Daily food intake of elephants ranges between 1 and 2% of the body mass (approx. 110 tons of vegetation annually). Elephant drinks up to 225 L of water every day, and can go without drinking for up to 4 days. Elephants' ability to reliably locate scattered, distant food and water resources is crucial for their survival.

● Social structure

The core social unit of the African elephant is the group consisting of female relatives and their offspring under leadership of an oldest and most experienced matriarch elephant. There are two larger social tiers: family units form larger "bond-groups" and multiple bond-groups form "clans". Elephant society is usually described as having fusion-fission organizational structure, where core family groups exhibit stable association over time, but the two larger social tiers are transient and result from opposing pressures. For example, food competition may create pressure for smaller group size (fission), but social benefits such as security and knowledge sharing may create pressure for larger group size (fusion). Male elephants leave their family units around the age of sexual maturity to socialize with older bulls in all-male group. They periodically enter a behavioral and physiological state of reproductive readiness (musth), during which they visit female families to mate with estrous females.

Elephant cognition

Elephants have the largest brains among terrestrial mammals, including the greatest volume of cerebral cortex. For ages the elephants were perceived as being highly

Page 4: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

sociable, cooperative, and intelligent animals, however, there are very few controlled experiments that support this perception. Because elephants' size and life style do not allow an easy laboratory setup, the studies of their behavior and cognitive abilities are usually confined to a limited number of experimental animals, who seems to vary widely in their mental capacities. Main trend is, however, very clear: elephants are very slow in learning and solving core tasks and problems routinely presented to primates and birds. However, many researchers argue that the conventional set of experimental problems is not relevant to elephant's survival in the fields and discuss the necessity of designing elephant-specific experiments to showcase their cognition, which is highly developed but is divergent from that of primates and birds. Elephants fail in tests designed for primates (and by primates) but excel in specific field problems requiring extensive long-term memory. Moreover, elephants exhibit behaviors that are highly unusual for non-human animals suggesting an existence of some elements of Theory of mind in their cognition. The following comparative table was derived mostly from Hart BL et al. (2008). "No data" means that we did not have definitive answers at time of the writing. It is possible that we will be able to fill the blanks later.

Parameter Elephants Great apes Birds

Tool use

use branches to switch

flies; throw stones at

rodents; scratch with

sticks

crack nuts with stone;

use stick to fish

termites

use sticks to fish

invertebrate prey

Tool manufacture modify branches and

sticks

choose and modify

sticks

choose and modify

sticks and wire to be

hook-like

Insight behavior

(understanding and/or

learning how to get bait

by pulling strings or

moving obstacles, etc.)

fail most of the time can solve and excel in

learning

can solve and learn

easily

Visual discrimination

(distinguish between

shapes, colors, sizes)

very poor learning

ability learn easily learn easily

Page 5: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

Spatial-temporal memory

excel in remembering

distant (hundreds of

miles apart) water

holes or foraging

grounds for decades

no data no data

Social memory (acoustic

characteristics,

chemosensory signals)

can recognize calls of

about 100 other

elephants from various

families and clans; can

recognize family

members after decades

after separation

no data no data

Self-awareness and

recognition (can

recognize its image in the

mirror)

documented

documented, not

considerably better

than in elephants

no data

Empathy to disabled/

deceased conspecifics

helping to injured or

distressed conspecifics;

recognition of remains

of dead conspecifics

(corpses as well as

bones)

characteristic to

humans no data

Comparison of African and Asian elephants

ParameterLaxodonta africana (African

elephant)

Elephas maximus (Asian

elephant)

Breeding interval 4-9 years 3-4 years

Preferred breeding season rainy season throughout the year

Average number of offspring 1 1

Gestation period 22 months 18 - 22 months

Birth mass ~105 kg (~230 lbs) ~107 kg (~235.5 lbs)

Time to weaning ~6.5 years ~4 years

Page 6: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

Age of reproductive maturity

(male and female)~11 years ~14 years

Approximate life span (in the wild

- in captivity)60 - 80 years 70 - 65 years

Adult mass3600 - 6000 kg (7920 - 13200

lbs)

3000 - 5000 kg (6600 - 11000

lbs)

Developmental stages (life cycle)

The following descriptions are based mostly on development of Loxodonta africana. However, embryonic development is similar in the both major elephant species (L. africana and E. maximus).

● Prenatal

❍ Early embryo

Page 7: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

❍ Late embryo

● Post natal

❍ Neonate Newborn baby elephant. Newborns are

precocious: typically they can stand and

walk within very short time after birth.

The brain of a newborn elephant is

underdeveloped (about 30-40% of the

size of that of an adult). Body mass is

about 77 - 113 kg (170 - 250 lbs).

Elephants are born without innate

knowledge of how to use their trunks.

Neonate has to learn the skills by

mimicking adults and exercising

thousands of muscles comprising the

trunk.

❍ Infant Baby elephant until weaning. Elephants

usually are fully weaned by 5-6 years of

age. Baby elephants are brought up in

matriarchal society, surrounded by

complex layers of extended family.

Infants develop close relationship with

other elephants, and especially, with

other female family members

(allomothers), who actively participate

in raising the young. It was shown that

infants, who witnessed killing of their

family members, exhibited signs of post-

traumatic stress disorder very similar to

humans: abnormal startle response,

depression, unpredictable asocial

behavior and hyperaggression, which can

persist through their lives.

Page 8: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

❍ Juvenile Young elephant from weaning until

puberty (~18 years of age). Weaning

begins during the first year of life and

continues until another sibling is born.

Puberty occurs between the ages of 9 and

15, and sexual maturity is reached at 15-

17.

❍ Adolescent Young elephant from puberty until first

mating. Elephants rarely mate until they

are in their 30s. At about 29 years of

age, males experience their first musth

(a period of sexual activity in male

elephants characterized by high

testosterone levels, urine dribbling, green

penis syndrome and swollen temporal

glands. Only a few mammalian species

undergo a period of adolescence.

Adolescent male elephants leave their

natal family to participate in all-male

groups while females continue staying

with their natal families. This is when

individuals acquire skills and experience,

and develop relationships that are of

great importance for their immediate and

future survival and reproductive success.

❍ Adult Mature, experienced and independent

elephant about 30-36 years of age and

older. Female can become a matriarch at

this age. Male occupies higher levels of

social hierarchy in all-male "batchelor"

groups.

Page 9: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

African elephants (Loxodonta africana) in Maryland zoo

Page 10: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis)

Blake S et al. Roadless wilderness area determines forest elephant movements in the Congo Basin. PLoS One. 2008;3(10) PMID: 18958284

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Borneo elephant (Elephas maximus)

Borneo Elephants: A High Priority for Conservation PLoS Biol. 2003 October; 1(1): e7. PMC176547

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Asian elephant infant (Elephas maximus)

Thongtip N et al. Successful artificial insemination in the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) using chilled and frozen-thawed semen. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Jun 22. PMC2718890

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References

Articles

● Gheerbrant E. Paleocene emergence of elephant relatives and the rapid radiation of African ungulates. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Jun 22. PMID: 19549873

● Plotnik JM et al. Self-recognition in the Asian elephant and future directions for cognitive research with elephants in zoological settings. Zoo Biol. 2009 Jun 9. PMID: 19514017

● Irie-Sugimoto N et al. Evidence of means-end behavior in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). Anim Cogn. 2008 Apr. PMID: 18087732

● King LE, Douglas-Hamilton I, Vollrath F. African elephants run from the sound of disturbed bees. Curr Biol. 2007 Oct 9. PMID: 17925207

Page 14: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

● Morris S, Humphreys D, Reynolds D. Myth, marula, and elephant: an assessment of voluntary ethanol intoxication of the African elephant (Loxodonta africana) following feeding on the fruit of the marula tree (Sclerocarya birrea). Physiol Biochem Zool. 2006 Mar-Apr PMID: 16555195

● Poole JH et al. Animal behaviour: elephants are capable of vocal learning. Nature. 2005 Mar 24;434(7032):455-6. PMID: 15791244

● Bradshaw GA et al. Elephant breakdown. Nature. 2005 Feb 24. PMID: 15729320

● Hutchinson JR, Famini D, Lair R, Kram R. Biomechanics: Are fast-moving elephants really running? Nature. 2003 Apr 3. PMID: 12673241

● Vollrath F, Douglas-Hamilton I. African bees to control African elephants. Naturwissenschaften. 2002 Nov. PMID: 12451453

● Williams N. More than just big ears. Curr Biol. 2002 Oct 15 PMID: 12401180

● Hart BL, Hart LA, Pinter-Wollman N. Large brains and cognition: where do elephants fit in? Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2008. PMID: 176174600

● Hildebrandt T et al. Foetal age determination and development in elephants. Proc Biol Sci. 2007 Feb 7. PMID: 17164195

● Drews B et al. Early embryo development in the elephant assessed by serial ultrasound examinations. Theriogenology. 2008 Jun. PMID: 18387665

● West JB. Snorkel breathing in the elephant explains the unique anatomy of its pleura. Respir Physiol. 2001 May. PMID: 11311306

● Weissengruber GE. The structure of the cushions in the feet of African elephants (Loxodonta africana). J Anat. 2006 Dec. PMID: 17118065

● Evans KE and Stephen H. Adolescence in male African elephants, Loxodonta africana, and the importance of sociality. Animal Behaviour. Volume 76, Issue 3, September 2008, Pages 779-787.

● Gaeth AP, Short RV, Renfree MB. The developing renal, reproductive, and respiratory systems of the African elephant suggest an aquatic ancestry. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 May 11. PMID: 10318922

Websites

● ADW: Loxodonta africana, African bush elephant.

Page 15: Elephants (Loxodonta africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, Elephas ... · (Mammut americanum) and wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), are extinct. The fossils of oldest known proboscidean

● ADW: Elephas maximus, Asiatic elephant.

● Loxodonta cyclotis, forest elephant: facts, videoss.

Last updated 08/07/09 [email protected]

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