When it's time for elephants at an African watering hole to leave, the matriarch initiates a coordinated "conversation" with herd leaders, researchers say. The matriarch kicks off the conversation with what scientists have dubbed a "let's-go rumble" while steadily flapping her ears, setting off a series of back and forth vocalizations, or rumbles, within the group before the entire family finally departs, Stanford University researchers report in the journal Bioacoustics. This measured and documented behavior shows elephants are a cognitively advanced species capable of using well-coordinated "conversations" to initiate cooperation within the group, lead author Caitlin O'Connell-Rodwell said. "These vocalizations facilitate the bonds between the elephants to be able to work together," she said. "It's the measure of an organized society. It demonstrates how another social animal grouping organizes itself through vocalizations." The study confirmed elephants use vocalization to coordinate action, and that usually three callers are involved in this very coordinated turn-taking conversation. "It's not just a chorus," O'Connell-Rodwell said. "As soon as one call ends, another call starts, then the next, then the next. It's connected like a string. Effectively they take a 3-second call and turn it into a 9-second call."
GMT 15:21 2017 Monday ,16 October
India man-eating tiger dies after being electrocutedGMT 20:20 2017 Sunday ,08 October
White tiger cubs maul keeper to death in IndiaGMT 09:50 2017 Thursday ,05 October
Leopard on the loose in Indian car factoryGMT 18:49 2017 Wednesday ,04 October
Cats kill one million birds a day in AustraliaGMT 20:36 2017 Wednesday ,27 September
Wildlife groups accused of funding abuses against Pygmies in AfricaGMT 17:41 2017 Tuesday ,26 September
Wildlife groups accused of funding abuses against Pygmies in AfricaGMT 10:55 2017 Wednesday ,20 September
Wildlife pays the price of Kenya's illegal grazingGMT 16:45 2017 Thursday ,14 September
Elephants hide by day, forage at night to evade poachers
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor