Search

Friday, May 31, 2013

Speeding Train Kills at Least Three in India

Moral of the story: take time to save the elephants; no need to speed!





New Delhi (CNN) -- A train speeding through a forested corridor in India's West Bengal killed three elephants and another is in a critical condition, a wildlife official said Friday.
A baby elephant was among the animals killed in the pre-dawn collision in India's Jalpaiguri district some 620 kilometers (385 miles) north of the state capital Kolkata, said V.K. Sood, chief conservator of forests in West Bengal state.
Another elephant is still in a critical condition after the train plowed into part of a herd crossing the tracks, he said.
Concern over similar incidents had prompted railway authorities to restrict train speeds in the area to 25km an hour. However, the railway department has said a speed of 50km an hour was permissible in the area where the accident occurred.
Sood said an inquiry is now underway to determine the speed of the train that killed the elephants Thursday, he said, adding that investigators were also looking at the levels of visibility on the track at the time.
As many as 36 elephants have been killed by trains in the area since 2004, Sood said.
India's former rail minister Pawan Kumar Bansal said in a Railway Budget speech in February the department needed to make special provision to protect what he called "these gentle giants."
"The railway family is deeply grieved by some incidents of death of elephants on railway tracks passing through forest areas. Several measures have been initiated in consultation with the Ministry of Environment and Forests, which I am confident will substantially reduce such accidents and safeguard the lives of these gentle giants," he said.
He said the department had already proposed a bypass rail link around one reserve with a sizable elephant population.
Conservationists estimate that India has a wild population of some 25,000 Asiatic elephants but their habitat is increasingly under pressure as human settlements encroach on nature reserves.
India has recently witnessed a number of cases of wild animals entering urban environments. In one high-profile incident a leopard killed one person and injured two other after wandering into a residential area in northeast India.

~Harmeet Shah Singh
May 31, 2013
CNN News


Go make a difference!

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Comment, Share, or Like if YOU Love Elephants Too!

English: I love elephants! ­­
Spanish: Me encanta elefantes!
Croatian: Volim slonova!
Czech: Miluji slony!
Danish: Jeg elsker elefanter!
French: J'aime des éléphants!
German: Ich liebe Elefanten!
Greek: Λατρεύω ελέφαντες!
Irish: Is breá liom elephants!
Italian: Io amo gli elefanti!
Japanese: 私はゾウが大好き!
Korean: 나는 코끼리를 사랑합니다!
Latin: Amo elephantis!
Norwegian: Jeg elsker elefanter!
Persian: من عاشق فیل!
Russian: Я люблю слонов!
Swedish: Jag älskar elefanter!
Turkish: Ben filler seviyorum!
Vietnamese: Tôi yêu con voi!
Welsh: Rwyf wrth fy modd eliffantod!
Yiddish: איך ליבע עלאַפאַנץ!
Lithuanian :Aš myliu dramblius!
Maltese: I imħabba iljunfanti!





Go make a difference!

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

55 Killed This Year in Tsavo

A few day's ago, I did a post stating that 11 elephants were killed in Tsavo recently.  Today's featured article updates that number: at least 55 have been killed since the beginning of the year!  



At least 55 elephants have been killed in Tsavo and Taita ranches since the beginning of this year, Taita Taveta governor John Mruttu has said.
Addressing hoteliers and caterers at a meeting held at the Sarova Taita Hills game lodge in Mwatate, Mruttu said the continued poaching of elephants and other game will have an adverse impact on tourism in the country.
"The situation is disturbing as three elephants are being killed every week," he said.
However, KWS senior assistant director in charge of the Tsavo conservation area, Julius Kimani, said only 34 elephants have been killed in the region.
Mruttu said improved mobile communication has made the fight against poachers more difficult.
"More poaching is happening in areas where mobile telephone connectivity is good. Before the phones came in, poachers used to hide ivory in villages while finding ways to access their markets but they can now easily call a boda boda and ferry the contraband," he said.
Mruttu said most of the elephants have been killed in private ranches where illegal poachers operated.
Amboseli and Tsavo region association of Hotel keepers and caterers chairperson Willy Mwadilo expressed fears that wildlife was under serious depletion due to poaching.

~Raphael Mwadime
The Star
May 29, 2013

Go make a difference!

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Senator Slams Circus Use of Endangered Elephants

This article is very interesting, as it brings up the topic of abuse of Asian Elephants.  They are endangered too!  African Elephants seem to get a lot of attention... but the Elephas maximus (Asian Elephant) needs our help as well!

Jordi Guillot, a senator for the Catalan Green Socialist party and member of the Parliamentary Association for the Protection of Animals, has slammed Spanish circuses for their use of thirteen endangered Asian elephants.
Europa Press revealed on Friday that the politician had filed an official parliamentary question calling on the government to put an end to the big top employment of the protected pachyderms, listed as a critically-endangered species in Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).
According to InfoCircus, a platform created by animal welfare NGOs including the Born Free Foundation, the elephants were born in the wild and as a result are not allowed to be used commercially.
Asian elephants, which can be told from African elephants by their comparatively smaller ears, have declined in number by at least 50% over the last three generations.
Guillot noted that the European Commission had confirmed circuses as a specific example of the type of "commercial use" prohibited under CITES, which is fully ratified in the EU, in response to a written question from an MEP.
In his question to parliament he argued: "If the Commission interprets the Convention in this way, member states should apply it."
He added that the use of Asian elephants should also be prohibited in advertising and requested clarification from the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness on what they defined as "commercial use".
He also asked why Spain does not forbid the use of Asian elephants in circuses when the European Commission does.

~Steve Tallantyre
The Local 
May 24, 2013



Go make a difference!

Monday, May 27, 2013

11 Dead Elephants Found in Tsavo

Uh oh... 



Eleven elephants have been killed in the Tsavo conservation in the past two weeks. Three male elephants aged between 35 and 40 years were gunned down at Mbale and Kalonzo ranches in Tsavo while eight carcasses were last week found by rangers in Ndara.
Julius Kimani, the Kenya Wildlife Services senior assistant director in-charge of Tsavo Ecosystem, said poachers hacked off the elephants tusks. He blamed the increase in poaching in the private ranches adjacent to Tsavo National Park to herders whom he said are armed with sophisticated guns.
Kimani said KWS has strengthened its law enforcement capacity and enhanced collaboration with other security agencies to address poaching. He said the elephants were killed when an operation led by Coast police boss Aggrey Adoli to flush out illegal herders began.
Most of the herders do not have documents to show that they have leased the ranches, said the police boss. Mbale group ranch was on the spot light last year following many cases of poaching on the 40,000 acre land.
"The herders are the main culprits in the poaching menace in Tsavo. We call upon the government and ranchers to flush them out because most of them are poachers but disguise as herders and kill our treasured elephants," he told the Star on the phone yesterday.

~Raphael Mwadime and Raabia Hawa
The Star
May 24, 2013


Go make a difference!

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Killing Wildlife ---> Money ---> Terrorist Groups

A follow- up to the post I did four nights ago, "Weapons for War or Elephants?"  

This is hard news to take, because it is clear that poachers are stepping up with their weapon choice- weapons used for war.  This is bad because let's say that the poachers keep killing the elephants, and keep getting money from the ivory.  Then, these criminals can buy more weapons from selling the ivory, and with that comes more power.  It's a terrible, continuous cycle.  


Arriving on military helicopters, aided by night vision camera, the attacks opened up on their victims with AK-47 weapons. It was a massacre.
The photograph is heart-wrenching and tragic. It is of elephant carcasses, some of 86 elephants slaughtered in Chad a few weeks ago. The victims included more than 30 pregnant females. Many aborted their calves when shot. The hunters butchered some, and left the others to die. The elephants had huddled together helplessly for protection.
Poachers are decimating the forest elephant. Populations have declined 62% in ten years. Unless something changes, elephants are headed for extinction in the wild.
The Rhinoceros story is equally alarming. Poaching of South African rhinos up 50% since 2011 and 5000 percent since 2007. The market for their horns, which can fetch $30,000 apiece, more per gram than gold or cocaine. Asians, especially Vietnamese and Chinese, consume the horns believing them to be a palliative. Rhino populations have dropped 90% in just fifty years.
Some say the Vietnamese are worst. They've already slaughtered their own Javan rhinoceros to extinction. Now they've set their sights on Africa. One Vietnamese diplomat was caught on camera receiving a rhino horn in the parking lot of the embassy in Johannesburg. It's not just Vietnamese or Chinese, though. The guilty users include Asian Americans.
U.S. laws may be stricter in prohibiting importing elephant tusks or rhino horns, but penalties are light. Dealing in a kilo of cocaine can send you to the slammer for years. Dealing in a kilo of rhino horn powder? A meaningless fine.
At least the Chinese, whom critics charge with responsibility for half the illegal fishing in the world and a major role in human trafficking, are trying to stop the trade in tusks and horns. Chinese film stars like Li Bingbing are warning against poaching. Apparently such efforts are deterring younger Chinese. But older generations - there and in countries like the U.S. -- remain impervious. A strategic communication campaign aimed at changing social norms to make purchase of horn or tusk power socially unacceptable is important and must be launched. That's merely one step in what needs to be a globally integrated, holistic approach that attacks the supply and the demand side of this illicit economy.
Conservation groups and some African governments have committed significant resources in an effort to disrupt the trade at the ground level, hiring and deploying thousands of park rangers and patrols into national parks, and using cameras, spy planes and even sending out drones to track the poachers.
"This approach is well intentioned," says Gretchen Peters, but it will never be enough." Author of Seeds of Terror, Peters is a recognized expert on terrorism finance and transnational crime networks.
"I believe it is vital to understand the complete logistical and financial picture of a transnational criminal organization in order to design a strategy that will strike at its heart," she says. "We must attack the problem so it will reduce the earnings of the criminal leadership and significantly degrade that organization's capacity to operate and to profit."
She adds: "We must start understanding and attacking criminal networks likes businesses, because that is what they are."
Experts agree that good ground enforcement can help reduce the flow of smuggled horns and tusks. But it's too little. The supply chain crosses borders and most of the illicit profits are generated outside of Africa.
The slaughter is outrageous enough. But the story gets worse. It's about more than consumers who believe (incorrectly) that rhino horn cures cancer and increases sexual potency.
The horn and tusk trade is merely one element of a broader scope of intertwined illegal activities in drug trafficking, arms smuggling, and money laundering. It all aims for the same goal: generating huge, illegal profits for criminals, who often provide funds that finance violent extremism. Those who bankroll these sophisticated quasi-military operations are international criminal networks, often working hand-in-hand with terror networks linked to or aligned with extremist groups.
International terrorists networks need more than ideology to function. They need money. That money, often laundered through legitimate fronts, helps recruiting. It helps terror networks subvert states, societies, and economies. It helps them move people and weapons through countries.
If we identify the networks and their leaders and follow the money, real action can be taken that deals these networks severe blows. We can find, follow and freeze bank accounts while employing a whole of government approach and cooperation with foreign partners to combat terrorist finance. But more is needed. A more telling move would be to drain those accounts and deprive criminal and terror networks of their cash.
That tactic unnerves U.S. Treasury officials, who opposed a similar approach in combating Mexican drug cartels. The last thing Treasury intends is to support terror networks. But the hard reality is that its posture affords transnational criminals and terror networks among its most powerful protections. It's absurd. Even though President Barack Obama has announced a new policy of reducing drone attacks, legally, there's no question that legal authority exists to kill Al Qaeda-linked terrorists who make war against the U.S. If we attack and kill terrorists - in operations that may unintentionally harm civilians - we can take non-kinetic action that deprives criminals and terrorists of their ability to function.
Peters made a huge impact with her excellent book, SEEDS OF TERROR, which examined the impact of the heroin trade in Afghanistan. She's on the right track, seeking to identify the criminal networks that trade in horns and tusks. Mapping those will light the path to identifying the leaders who organize and run these networks, and their comrades who traffic in terror.
It's a sensible approach to dealing a devastating blow against those who threaten the security of American families, and perversely turn human sensibility towards other species with whom we share this planet into a tragic travesty.
~James P. Farwell
Friday, May 24, 2013
Huff Post World


Go make a difference!

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Fun Post #2

Hey readers!  It's day two of Fun Posts!  

Today's challenge:
Elephant Photo Shoot/ Photo Finding Contest

Find (in your opinion) the best picture of an elephant!  For bonus points, cite where the picture was taken, who took it, and what type of elephant it is (ex. African Bush Elephant, Pygmy Elephant, etc...)

My example:
Photo by Brian Christy, National Geographic
Bornean Pygmy Elephant
Taken in Borneo

WHO DOESN'T THINK THAT THIS ELEPHANT IS THE CUTEST THING IN THE WORLD!?






Have fun, and share with friends!




Go make a difference!

Friday, May 24, 2013

Fun Post #1

Hey eis4elephants readers!  As we are nearing the 200th day blogging, I wanted to do some (SUPER FUN) interactive posts!  

The first one that I have is this:  You, the readers, get to do your own blog!  Follow the steps below to write your own post, just like I do!


1.  Go online, or in a magazine 

2. Find an article about elephants

3. Site your sources, and find a good picture that relates to that article (there may be one that goes with the article)

4. Copy and paste it to a blank document, and send it to me at eis4elephants@gmail.com!

5. Include maps whenever possible, because I love maps! 



Send it to me, too!  I'd love to see what you can come up with!  


Go make a difference!

Thursday, May 23, 2013

The Secret Life of Endangered Elephants

I love seeing elephants be elephants in the wild!  This article and video remind me of the candid photos in my school yearbook that I received today!



Click here to watch the video if you cannot access it.


"We can only manage what we measure"—that is the key to a unique research project which is working towards scientifically proven, evidence-based, conservation of the Malaysian elephant. It is being done with the help of GPS collars, camera traps and hours spent searching through elephant dung.

The work is being carried out by MEME—the Management and Ecology of Malaysian Elephants—a research project being led by Dr Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz from The University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus (UNMC). The aim is to learn more about the Asian elephant, and crucially how to mitigate the growing problem of human-elephant conflict.
To help develop a long term strategy to protect the country's endangered elephant population Yayasan Sime Darby (YSD) has formally announced a RM3.36m (£700,000) commitment to support MEME's research. The grant will also help MEME build capacity within the Malaysian Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) and Malaysian academic circles to produce a knowledgeable generation of wildlife researchers and managers.
As well as helping to improve current management techniques, the project will also be developing its research into the immediate and mid-term behavioral response of elephants to translocation—when they are moved away from an area of human-elephant conflict (HEC).
YSD Governing Council Member Caroline Christine Russell said it was necessary to monitor what happens to these animals after they are translocated. She said: "In other parts of the world where translocation of elephants is practiced as a mitigating measure against HEC, scientists observed high death rates and competition for resources and space at the release site. Translocated elephants have also been observed travelling back to their capture sites or their original home range, hampering the original objective of translocating the animals in the first place."
Dr Campos-Arceiz said: "Peninsular Malaysia may become one of the last strongholds for Asian elephants in Southeast Asia. Approximately 40 per cent of the Peninsula is still covered by well-conserved forest and includes the protected Taman Negara National Park which is home to around 600 elephants, the largest elephant population in the region. With low human density, a very developed economy, and a functional Department of Wildlife and National Parks the long-term conservation of elephants in this part of the world depends completely on social and political will. With our project, we intend to contribute the know-how and provide data to aid the authorities to do an evidence-based elephant conservation."
~PHYS.ORG
Thursday, May 23, 2013

Go make a difference!

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Weapons For War or Elephants?

Interesting... I never thought that these types of weapons were used on elephants!

Reuters/Reuters - The carcasses of some of the 22 elephant slaughtered in a helicopter-bourne attack lie on the ground in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Garamba National Park, in this undated handout picture released by the DRC Military. 


UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Armed groups in central Africa are using powerful weapons some of which may be left over from the civil war in Libya, to kill elephants for their ivory, the United Nations said on Monday.
In a report to theU.N. Security Council U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said elephant poaching was a growing security concern, particularly in Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad and Gabon.
Ban said the illegal trade in ivory may be an important source of funding for armed groups, including warlord fugitive Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army (LRA).
"Also of concern is that poachers are using more and more sophisticated and powerful weapons, some of which, it is believed, might be originating from the fallout in Libya," his report said.
Ban said that in Minkebe Park in northeastern Gabon, more than 11,000 elephants had been slaughtered between 2004 and 2013, while in Chad in March, poachers killed 86 elephants - including 33 pregnant females - within a week. In Cameroon's Bouba Ndjida National Park, more than 300 elephants were killed during the last two months of last year.
"The situation has become so serious that national authorities in some countries, such as Cameroon, have decided to use the national army, in addition to law and order enforcement agencies to hunt down poachers," Ban said.
United Nations officials say growing Asian demand for ivory is helping to drive a poaching boom.
The U.N. Security Council's Group of Experts, who monitor an arms embargo imposed on Libya at the start of an uprising in 2011 that overthrew Muammar Gaddafi, said last month that the North African state had become a key source of weapons in the region as its nascent government struggles to exert authority.
The experts said weapons were spreading from Libya at an "alarming rate," fueling conflicts in Mali, Syria and elsewhere and boosting the arsenals of extremists and criminals in the region.
Ban's report singled out the LRA and Kony, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes. He and his commanders are accused of abducting thousands of children to use as fighters in a rebel army that earned a reputation for chopping off limbs as a form of discipline.
LRA fighters fought the Ugandan government for nearly two decades before being ejected from their strongholds in the north of the country in 2005, forcing them to establish bases in the jungles of other countries in the region.

~By Michelle Nichols
Monday, May 20, 2013
Yahoo News






Go make a difference!

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

The Prince Steps In

"Now is the time for young people who believe passionately in protecting these animals to speak out before it's too late."


~Prince William




Click here for an amazing and inspirational speech by Prince William, that shows us that young people CAN make a difference!

He said that: “Either we take action to stem the trade or we will run out of the animals – there is no other outcome possible.”
The Duke was addressing a conference of conservationists, law enforcement officers and politicians from around the world who gathered at St James’s Palace to discuss new ways of tacking the £6.6 billion annual trade in smuggled ivory, rhino horns and products made from endangered species.
His father, the Prince of Wales, who hosted the meeting, spoke starkly of rhinos, tigers and elephants disappearing from the wild “within a decade or even less” if the “astonishing explosion in poaching” by organised gangs was not stopped.
He said the world was in a “terrible race against time” to save species “whose loss will be an immeasurable stain on the whole course of human history, as well as an enduring and irreversible tragedy”.
The End Wildlife Crime conference was the most high-profile event yet organised by the Prince of Wales’s International Sustainability Unit, and was attended by Owen Paterson, the Environment Secretary, who agreed that “history will not forgive us” if world leaders failed to act.
In the autumn the Government will host a meeting of heads of state from around the world to discuss ways of stamping out what the Prince described as “one of the most serious threats to wildlife ever”, which has been fuelled by demand for status symbols such as carved ivory from a growing middle class in countries including China and Vietnam.
The Prince convened yesterday’s meeting to generate ideas which can be put to the heads of state later this year.
He said: “As a father and soon-to-be grandfather, I find it inconceivable that our children could live in a world bereft of these animals.”
He also stressed that stamping out the wildlife trade was not just about protecting animals, as proceeds from poaching are used to fund terrorism and the trade is often linked to human trafficking, drug dealing and murder.
The Duke of Cambridge said education was crucial to ensure that people buying “luxurious and fashionable” goods made from illegal animal parts were made aware of the “barbarity” of how they were obtained.
Past experience in countries such as Japan, where the Duke of Edinburgh campaigned for an end to ivory imports in the 1990s, has shown that when consumers realise animals are slaughtered by poachers for their tusks and other body parts, demand dries up.
The Prince and the Duke were shown a bewildering variety of goods seized by UK Border Police, including books bound in elephant hide, phials of bear bile used in traditional medicines (“Just terrible”, said the Prince) a bottle of whisky containing a whole snake and numerous rhino horns concealed in china dolls and wooden statuettes.
The Duke of Cambridge stroked a tiny stuffed tiger cub, no bigger than a guinea pig, and said: “Unbelievable. Something so small as that. Such a waste.”
Grant Miller, of the UK Border Force, said that in the past year more than 675 items had been seized, including a Rolls Royce with alligator skin upholstery, 1.6 tonnes of tortoise jelly (a foodstuff) and a live Geoffroys Cat.
In the past, rhino horn and tiger products have been used in traditional oriental medicines, but rhino horn is now being sold as a hangover cure, despite having “as much medicinal value as one of my toenails”, said Mr Paterson, while tiger bones are used in wine which is given as a high-status gift in China.
John Scanlon, of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, said: “People are now speculating on extinction. They are buying up resources now on the basis that they will be worth more in the future because the species will become extinct.”

~ Gordon Rayner
The Telegraph
May 21, 2013


Go make a difference!

Monday, May 20, 2013

Indian Dolphin, Elephant Among Top 100 Mammals Facing Extinction

Remember:  this article is mainly about ASIAN Elephants, not African! :)



LONDON: India's Gangetic river dolphin and wild elephants figure in the latest 100 top mammals on the verge of extinction.

The Zoological Society of London have for the first time scored the world's mammals according to how Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered (EDGE) they are.

The list that includes the world's most extraordinary threatened species - frogs that give birth through their skin and mammals that are immune to cyanide - yet most are unfamiliar and not currently receiving conservation attention includes the two entries from India.

The list has raised a serious alarm for the largest land mammal in Asia - the elephant.

Ranked 17th on the list of 100 most endangered mammals, ZSL says only 35,000-50,000 Asian elephants were thought to remain in the wild in 1995. Since then, several populations have dwindled further, and scientists fear that current populations may have fallen well below this estimate.

The majority of elephants occur in India (20,000-25,000) and Myanmar (5,000-6,000). There are thought to be fewer than 200 elephants surviving in Vietnam.

Habitat loss has been a primary factor in the decline of the Asian elephant.
ZSL said, "The elephants have become increasingly isolated in habitat patches as human settlements cut off ancient migratory routes. There is concern that many of these subpopulations are too small to be viable. Even protected populations are at risk from inbreeding and disease."

Elephants are increasingly coming into contact with farmers and local people as their feeding grounds are destroyed. They raid crops, destroy properties, and sometimes even kill people.

The villagers often retaliate by killing the elephants, and experts believe this is now the main cause of elephant deaths in Asia.

Poaching for ivory, and occasionally meat, continues to threaten wild populations, although reliable estimates of the number of elephants killed and the quantities of ivory and other body parts collected and traded are scarce.

Since only males have tusks, poaching has resulted in populations becoming skewed towards females. This has affected breeding rates and may lead to increased instances of inbreeding and decreased breeding success.

The River Dolphin has been ranked 60th most endangered mammal in the world.

In the river basins in India the dolphin is present mostly in plains with slow-flowing rivers. Today it is found in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna and Karnaphuli-Sangu river systems of Bangladesh and India.

Surveys of portions of the range of the Ganges subspecies have collectively accounted for 1,200-1,800 animals.

The main problem according to ZSL is that the dolphin lives in one of the most densely populated areas of the world. It is threatened primarily by the damming of rivers for irrigation and electricity generation, which degrades habitat, isolates populations and prevents seasonal migration. More than 20 barrages and 18 high dams have been constructed in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Megna river systems alone since 1956, and in the northern Ganges tributaries at least three of six subpopulations that were isolated by barrages have recently disappeared.

ZSL says, "Further declines are expected as more barrages are planned and under construction throughout the species' range. The proposed Ganges-Brahmaptura inter-link canal and dam project, expected to be completed in India in 2016, will involve additional dam construction and diversion of water from rivers inhabited by dolphins. This will undoubtedly result in further habitat loss and degradation, population fragmentation, and an increase in dolphin strandings."

Since the mid 1990s, there have been increasing reports of dolphins trapped in irrigation canals near Sukkur Barrage, many of which die when the canals are drained for annual de-silting and maintenance.

Professor Jonathan Baillie, ZSL's director of conservation says, "The results of the mapping exercise are alarming. Currently only five per cent of the areas we've identified as priorities for EDGE mammals and 15% of the EDGE amphibian areas are protected."


~Kounteya Sinha
May 20, 2013
Times of India


Go make a difference!

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Talking Animals?


A very interesting guide to elephant sign-language!  National Geographic is just so good at what they do....

Elephants may use a variety of subtle movements and gestures to communicate with one another, according to researchers who have studied the big mammals in the wild for decades. To the casual human observer, a curl of the trunk, a step backward, or a fold of the ear may not have meaning. But to an elephant—and scientists like Joyce Poole—these are signals that convey vital information to individual elephants and the overall herd.
Biologist and conservationist Joyce Poole and her husband, Petter Granli, both of whom direct ElephantVoices, a charity they founded to research and advocate for conservation of elephants in various sanctuaries in Africa, have developed an online database decoding hundreds of distinct elephant signals and gestures. The postures and movements underscore the sophistication of elephant communication, they say. Poole and Granli have also deciphered the meaning of acoustic communication in elephants, interpreting the different rumbling, roaring, screaming, trumpeting, and other idiosyncratic sounds that elephants make in concert with postures such as the positioning and flapping of their ears.
Poole has studied elephants in Africa for more than 37 years, but only began developing theonline gestures database in the past decade. Some of her research and conservation work has been funded by the National Geographic Society.
“I noticed that when I would take out guests visiting Amboseli [National Park in Kenya] and was narrating the elephants’ behavior, I got to the point where 90 percent of the time, I could predict what the elephant was about to do,” Poole said in an interview. “If they stood a certain way, they were afraid and were about to retreat, or [in another way] they were angry and were about to move toward and threaten another.”
Over the course of thousands of hours of observations, Poole came to understand and essentially translate what elephants were communicating to one another. She was also the first to discover musth in African elephants, a state of heightened sexual and aggressive activity in males, during which they display characteristic behaviors such as the gestures classified in the database as ear-wavetrunk-bounce-draghead-tosschin-in, and the distinctive musth-walk, a sort of elephant strut.
As Poole was working in the bush, her husband, who has a communications background, immediately saw the value of raising public awareness of the sophisticated behavior of these charismatic animals and was eager to share what they were learning. “Petter said, ‘Let’s get this out there and make it available for people,’” Poole explained.
Poole and Granli began the process of characterizing the gestures and displays they were seeing in their fieldwork. They created nine overarching categories for their gestures database: attentiveaggressiveambivalentdefensivesocial integrationmother-offspringsexualplay, and death (since elephants have marked behavior around dead companions).
“Elephants can be drama queens and really expressive, or they can be incredibly subtle and understated. It depends on what’s going on and the dynamics of the group,” Poole said.
Mating Pandemonium
Some of the more dramatic behavior is seen in the sexual category in a display the researchers labeled mating-pandemonium.
“The females rushes forward from having mated and just starts this incredible display where she’s ear-flapping, rumbling, roaring, and making a hell of a racket, and it draws in everybody else—the whole family participates,” Poole said. “Then she’ll go over and sniff his penis and semen. She even picks [semen] up off the ground with her trunk and splashes herself with it, roaring and rumbling. This is the drama queen stuff, though in this case, it serves to attract other, more distant males.”
And then there are the subtler gestures, such as the attentive category’s freezing posture, which elephants use when they detect a possible threat. Elephant rumbles contain very low frequencies, some of which people cannot hear. Elephants can detect the more powerful of these sounds from several miles away, and these same vibrations travel seismically through the ground even farther. Picking up on these signals may cause elephants to freeze as a group and hold completely still, Poole explained.
“Someone might freeze at the back of the group first,” Poole said, “and immediately then everyone else picks up the sounds we can’t hear and the vibrations we don’t feel.” Elephants have been observed responding to sounds like other elephants, vehicles, and stampeding zebras from over a mile away, as well as distant thunder and earthquakes. Reacting appropriately to these sounds is important for their survival.
Sense of Humor
Poole recalls how elephants at play used to charge her car, appearing to trip and fall while tusking the ground (tusk-ground gesture) in front of her vehicle. “I used to think that they really did trip—no longer!” Poole said. “I have seen it enough times to know that pretending to fall over in front of the car is all part of the fun. It is one of the behaviors that led me to say that elephants have a sense of self and a sense of humor. They know that they are funny.”
Following are examples from the nine overarching categories that Joyce Poole and Petter Granli have categorized to decode elephant gestures.
(All images and video are copyrighted by ElephantVoices and included here courtesy of Joyce Poole and Petter Granli.)
Aggressive (Ear-Spreading)
A young elephant in Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique threatens Poole’s vehicle, from which she is observing him. He spreads his ears in an exaggerated way to intimidate her. Typically in such an aggressive stance, an elephant will hold its head well above its shoulders and, with tusks lifted, direct its gaze at its adversary. As seen in the standing-tall display, another aggressive gesture described in the database, an elephant may increase its height by standing on a log or an anthill to assume greater stature, a tactic used by males when they’re sizing each other up.
Mother-Offspring (Caress)
The relationship between a mother elephant and her offspring is a protective, reassuring, and comforting one. Mothers and other family members caress the young in many different ways, by wrapping a trunk over the calf’s back leg, as seen in the photo above from Amboseli National Park in Kenya. Mothers also wrap their trunks around the calf’s belly, over its shoulder, and under its neck, often touching its mouth. A gentle rumbling sound often accompanies the caress gesture.
Attentive (Periscope-Sniff)
Elephants have an incredible sense of smell. The way an elephant holds the tip of its trunk can tell an observer where its attention is directed. When the trunk is lifted up in an s-shape, called the periscope-sniff, the elephant is detecting scents carried on the wind. Such a movement is used if additional information is wanted, such as if the elephant is meeting strangers or perceives danger. Another common type of sniff is the sniff-toward, in which the trunk is held relatively straight and pointed in the direction of interest.
Defensive (Group-Advance)
Elephants advance toward Poole’s vehicle en masse in a coordinated group defensivemaneuver. Elephants’ first line of defense is to bunch together in response to a perceived threat while they decide what action to take. In the photo above, an elderly matriarch named Provocadora—of the Mabenzi elephant group in Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park—had instigated the group-advance. She then handed off the “dirty work” to the other females, Poole said. Tuskless, another female elephant led the assault with the support of 35 other elephants behind her.
Death
Elephants are empathetic and will console, feed, assist, or attempt to rouse an injured or fallen elephant. They also have an understanding of death and appear to pay homage to the dead of their own kind. Elephants may use their tusks and trunk to try and feed a dead elephant, or attempt to lift or even carry sick, dying, or dead elephants.
Ambivalent (Touch-Face)
If an elephant feels uneasy, or is ambivalent about what to do next, he or she may engage intouch-face, a self-directed touching of the face, mouth, ear, trunk, tusk, or temporal gland, apparently to reassure and self-soothe.
Social Integration (Let’s-Go-Stance)
When a member of a family wants to go in a specific direction, she will adopt a particular type of posture that Poole and Granli have termed the let’s-go-stance. The female elephant initiating the movement will stand on the periphery of the group and lift or swing her foot (foot-swinging gesture) in the direction she wants to travel. She’ll purposefully face the desired direction, as her rumble call tells the other elephants, “I want to go this way. Let’s go together,” which she’ll repeat every minute or so. Her persistent calling attracts the attention of others who may slowly move to join her.
~ Christy Ullrich
National Geographic
April 24, 2013


Go make a difference!