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Social
standing influences how far elephants travel for food, study
finds
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
A
family of elephants leaves a river in Samburu National
Reserve upon the arrival of a more dominant elephant family.
Monsoon, the matriarch (third from the right in foreground)
in the more dominant family, is equipped with a GPS radio
collar, allowing researchers to track her movements.
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Photo
by George Wittemyer
When resources are scarce,
who you know and where you're positioned on the social totem pole
affects how far you'll go to search for food. At least that's the
case with African elephants, according to a study led by
ecologists at the University of California, Berkeley, who
collaborated with researchers at Save the Elephants, a non-profit
research organization based in Kenya, and at the University of
Oxford in England.
An analysis of social dominance
relationships and roaming patterns of free-ranging elephants in
the Samburu and Buffalo Springs National Reserves in northern
Kenya found that elephants led by older, more dominant matriarchs
tromped significantly fewer miles to seek food than those a few
rungs lower on the social ladder.
During the dry season, when
water and vegetation were harder to come by, dominant groups
traveled an average of 4-5 kilometers per day, about half the
distance of subordinate groups that would trek 8-11 kilometers
per day.
Additionally, dominant groups
in the study were more likely to stick to the preferred central,
protected areas of the park, where fewer humans and more water
can be found.
"This work shows, for the
first time, the role social factors play in the dispersal of
elephants in an ecosystem," said lead author George
Wittemyer, a post-doctoral researcher at UC Berkeley's College of
Natural Resources and a National Science Foundation International
Research Fellow. "The findings have significant policy
implications for how elephant populations are managed."
The elephants in this study
occupied an open park, but in many areas of Africa, significant
tracts of land are being fenced off to keep the elephants away
from agricultural communities where the pachyderms' propensity to
raid crops have earned them the label of pests. For example, some
12,000 elephants are enclosed in a 7,000 square kilometer area of
South Africa's Kruger National Park.
The fencing practice has
generated a great deal of debate about how best to balance the
needs of the elephants with those of local residents - many of
whom are subsistence farmers in need of protecting their crops.
But the questions currently focus on the impact of the elephants
on the local vegetation.
"Elephants can feed on a
wide range of vegetation, but if they can't move, they're more
likely to focus on a particular species - such as a favorite tree
- potentially removing it from a local area," said
Wittemyer. "Being 'ecosystem engineers,' they are capable of
changing wooded plains to complete grasslands. Elephants have
huge space and resource needs, and are particularly impacted by
land use changes. Fencing in these populations means blocking
them from their normal behavior of dispersal and migration, and
changing the dynamics of how they interact with their
environment."
The new findings, published in
the October issue of the journal Behavioral
Ecology and Sociobiology,
suggest that fencing can have other impacts not previously known
on the social behavior of the elephants.
"What happens when
elephant groups are forced into close contact with each other all
the time? That's not yet clear," said Wittemyer. "Current
elephant management plans do not yet consider the impact on
social relationships."
Elephants are known for their
complex social networks, with families of six to 12 individuals
ruled by a matriarch. "They're one of the very few species
that have a level of complexity in their social networks
comparable to humans," said Wittemyer. "Studies have
shown that elephants can distinguish more than 100 individuals
just by their vocalization patterns."
The researchers individually
recognize in northern Kenya over 900 elephants - including seven
who were fitted with GPS collars. Over the course of nine years,
they carefully observed elephant interaction, taking note of the
telltale behavior of social dominance, such as the flaring of the
ears, a tusk poke here or a trunk slap there, to determine rank.
Three of the GPS-collared
elephants were from very dominant families, two were in the
middle, and two were positioned low in the social hierarchy.
Elephant groups averaged nine members and were each led by a
matriarch. Out of the study population, 50 groups were the focus
of this paper.
"Save the Elephants'
advanced satellite tracking system is enabling us a unique and
fascinating insight into the hourly movements of our study
elephants," said Iain Douglas-Hamilton, study co-author and
founder of Save the Elephants, which supported the radio-tracking
of the elephant movements. "Our collars are now revealing
how complex the relationship is between elephants' social
structure and their environment."
Interestingly, the differences
in movement among the various groups disappeared during the wet
season, when food and water are readily available.
"When resources are
plentiful, there is little competition, so there is no need for
socially mediated differentiation in how space is used,"
said Wittemyer. "Dominant groups actually increase their
movements in the wet season, exploring the region and interacting
socially with other groups. Elephants love to move. It's when
conditions are bad that they conserve energy by restricting their
movement."
Other co-authors of the study
are Wayne Getz, UC Berkeley professor of environmental science,
policy and management; and Fritz Vollrath, professor of zoology
at the University of Oxford.
Additional funding was provided
by the National Science Foundation.
Source:
University of California, Berkeley

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