Abstract

We present a detailed study of male associations in the Asian elephant, using 6 years of data on identified, non-musth males. Adult males spent greater proportions of their time solitarily than in mixed-sex or in all-male groups. Old (over 30 years) males were sighted more frequently with their age-peers and less frequently with young (15–30 years) males than expected at random in all-male groups. Young males were not sighted more frequently with old males than with young males, and did not disproportionately initiate associations with old males. These results suggest that male associations, in the absence of females, may allow for old non-musth males to test strengths against age-peers. Social learning from older individuals did not seem to be important in male associations, unlike that observed in the African savannah elephant. We also found a constraint on the sizes of all-male groups, similar to that seen in female groups in our study population, and all-male groups were rarer and smaller than those in African savannah elephant. Although male associations were weak, most males had a significant top associate, with whom their association was the strongest, in female absence. In mixed-sex groups, male associations occurred at random, suggesting that males were tracking female groups independently. Differences in male social organization from that of the related African savannah elephant that occupies a similar niche possibly arise from differences in ecology.

Highlights

  • Adult males and females of many large mammals exhibit sexual dimorphism and strikingly different lifestyles, with female philopatry and male dispersal

  • Restriction on All-Male Group Size We calculated the average of the proportions of sightings that focal males spent with their different associates: we divided the number of sightings in which a focal male was seen with a specific associate by the total number of sightings of the focal male in female absence, and averaged this proportion across all associates of the focal male

  • Similar to the comparison of time spent in mixed-sex groups in the section above (Proportions of time spent in all-male and mixed-sex groups and their relationship with male age), we examined whether old males spent a smaller proportion of their time than young males in all-male groups by performing a Mann–Whitney U test

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Summary

Introduction

Adult males and females of many large mammals exhibit sexual dimorphism and strikingly different lifestyles, with female philopatry and male dispersal (see Greenwood, 1980; Ruckstuhl and Neuhaus, 2000). Following dispersal from their natal groups, males may follow different strategies. Strong male associations are not expected in these species and may occur primarily in the context of coalitions to defend or contest access to females [for example, Saayman (1971) in baboons, Connor et al (1992) and Gerber et al (2020) in bottlenose dolphins, van Hooff and van Schaik (1994) in non-human primates, Wagner et al (2008) in hyaenas]. There has been little study on male association patterns in mammals overall, especially on those species that rove between female groups and form temporary associations

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