Abstract

Elephants are highly intelligent animals with a huge capacity for social cognition, living in large, long-lived, related herds. In captivity, it is extremely difficult to meet all of the species’ ecological needs, as well as those required individual by individual, but improvements are continually being made. After identifying impaired welfare, one collection made the decision to relocate four female African Elephants (Loxodonta africana) to a different facility. As the worlds’ largest land mammal, many safety, welfare, and logistical considerations were undertaken. The elephants travelled in two pairs, a mother–daughter pair and an older unrelated female and a younger unrelated female with a strong social bond. As a result, there was a short gap in between transports, allowing for further habituation to transport crates and the heat of summer. The changes in both social and individual behaviours of the two females remaining when their group was temporarily reduced from four to two were investigated using one-zero sampling. The study determined the daily activities of the elephants comparing ‘before transport’ to ‘after transport’ for the two remaining elephants to establish any changes in their behaviours as a result of this disturbance. Post transport, there was an increase in both human-audible vocalisations and temporal gland secretions, and hugely decreased play behaviour was observed. The dynamic between the remaining pair was also altered with more tactile behaviours from mother to daughter seen but more submission from daughter to mother. This led to the conclusion that the elephants, although mostly unrelated and living in an ‘unnatural’ captive setting, had the same signs of stress and behavioural change as would a highly related group if separated.

Highlights

  • Long-term studies such as those conducted in Amboseli National Park [7] have provided huge insight into the behavioural repertoire of elephants, their communication, and how these behaviours and resulting highly related herds could be affected by anthropogenic change

  • This study focused on a captive herd of four female African elephants (Loxodonta africana), housed at Knowsley Safari (KS), Merseyside, UK

  • Of the time spent in proximity to another elephant, 100% after transport was between Tana and Nala, compared to 66% of time in proximity to another elephant being between the pair before transport

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Summary

Introduction

Elephants of both extant species (Loxodonta africana and Elephas maximus) live in matriarchal fission–fusion herds of varying size in situ [1] Their complex social structures and highly related herds have been studied extensively. Populations of both species of elephant are in consistent decline due to poaching and other human–animal conflicts, as well as habitat loss and compartmentalisation of their home ranges [2,3,4]. Captive elephants are known to develop stereotypic behaviours, well documented due to being housed in potentially inappropriate captive environments and the resulting change in psychological state [9]

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