Abstract

Elephants exhibit remarkable vocal plasticity, and case studies reveal that individuals of African savannah (Loxodonta africana) and Asian (Elephas maximus) elephants are capable of vocal production learning. Surprisingly, however, little is known about contextual learning (usage and comprehension learning) in elephant communication. Usage learning can be demonstrated by training animals to vocalize in an arbitrary (cue-triggered) context. Here we show that adult African savannah elephants (n = 13) can vocalize in response to verbal cues, reliably producing social call types such as the low-frequency rumble, trumpets and snorts as well as atypical sounds using various mechanisms, thus displaying compound vocal control. We further show that rumbles emitted upon trainer cues differ significantly in structure from rumbles triggered by social contexts of the same individuals (n = 6). Every form of social learning increases the complexity of a communication system. In elephants, we only poorly understand their vocal learning abilities and the underlying cognitive mechanisms. Among other research, this calls for controlled learning experiments in which the prerequisite is operant/volitional control of vocalizations.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Vocal learning in animals and humans’.

Highlights

  • Dolphins, seals and bats, elephants belong to a diverse and dissimilar group of non-human mammals proven capable of vocal production learning, i.e. of structurally modifying signals as a result of auditory experience [1,2]

  • We documented 13 African elephants that vocalized in response to verbal cues, and reliably produced rumbles, trumpets, snorts and alterations from those

  • We found that some individuals produced novel, high-frequency sounds that are not part of the natural African elephant repertoire

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Summary

Introduction

Dolphins, seals and bats, elephants belong to a diverse and dissimilar group of non-human mammals proven capable of vocal production learning, i.e. of structurally modifying signals as a result of auditory experience [1,2]. The vocal system of elephants is characterized by its plasticity, exhibiting a grading between call types, call-type combinations and context-dependent within-call type flexibility [3]. African elephants use vocalizations with fundamental frequencies (F0) in the infrasonic range (rumbles) for short- and long-distance communication. When aroused, they produce higher pitched trumpets, snorts, and roars [3]. We have only scratched the surface of vocal production mechanisms in elephants, but it has become increasingly clear that their acoustic flexibility reflects special nasopharyngeal morphological structures. While roars seem to be laryngeal as well, trumpets and snorts seem to be produced by blasts out of the trunk

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