Recently, Scientists have found evidence with the help of artificial intelligence (AI) tools that elephants have their own names that they use to address each other.
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- The study, ‘African elephants address one another with individually specific name-like calls’, was published in the journal Nature on June 10.
- It was carried out by Michael Pardo, Kurt Fristrup and George Wittemyer of Colorado State University (US), David Lolchuragi and Iain Douglas-Hamilton of Save The Elephants (Kenya), Joyce Poole and Petter Granl of ElephantVoices (Norway), and Cynthia Moss of Amboseli Elephant Research Project (Kenya)
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Key Findings of the Study
- Role of Artificial Intelligence: Due to their complexity, which often eludes human auditory detection, artificial intelligence played a vital role in analysing these rumbles.
- Recognition of Individual Calls: The study assisted by AI uncovered that these rumbles include a distinct component resembling names, allowing elephants to identify and react to individual calls.
- Analysis of Elephant Vocalizations: Researchers analysed vocalisations, primarily rumbles produced by elephants using their vocal cords, akin to human speech, emitted in Amboseli National Park (Southern Kenya) and Samburu National Reserve (Northern Kenya).
- Unique Naming Behaviour: Dolphins and parrots mimic their own species’ sounds to communicate, whereas elephants are the first non-human animals observed using distinctive names that are not imitations.
- Vocal Communication: Elephants learn to link specific sounds with individual elephants, enabling them to directly communicate and capture the attention of particular individuals through distinct vocalisations.
- Social Bonds: Elephants’ social bonds are crucial, allowing them to maintain multiple relationships within their groups effectively.
- Behaviour of Elephants: Elephants are known for their intelligence, which includes impressive memory, problem-solving skills, and complex ways of communicating.
- They use various behaviours—visual, acoustic (related to sound), and tactile (related to touch)—to interact with each other. Previous research has studied these interactions, especially during greetings.
Elephants
- About: They are keystone species that play a crucial role in preserving the balance and health of forest ecosystems. They possess the largest brain size among terrestrial animals.
- Leadership: The oldest female leads the group in foraging for food and water.
- Reproduction: The gestation period for the breeding pair lasts approximately 22 months, resulting in the birth of a single calf. During birth, female members of the herd encircle the mother for her protection.
- Grazers: Elephants play a vital role as grazers and browsers, consuming substantial amounts of vegetation daily and dispersing seeds, which supports plant reproduction and growth.
- Impact on Asian Landscape: Elephants shape the dense vegetation of the Asian landscape by creating clearings in forests, facilitating sunlight access to seedlings and fostering natural forest regeneration.
- Water Acess: Elephants also dig for water when surface water is scarce, creating access to water for themselves and other creatures.
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Project Elephant:
- About: Project Elephant, launched in February 1992, is a government initiative supported by the Central Government of India.
- It focuses on safeguarding and effectively managing elephant populations in states where wild elephants roam freely.
- Objectives:
- Conservation Planning: Implementing science-based strategies to protect elephants.
- Combatting Illegal Trade: Preventing the illicit trafficking of elephant tusks and shielding elephants from hunters and poachers.
- Preventing Deaths: Implementing measures to reduce unnatural causes of elephant mortality in India.
- Restoring Habitats: Rehabilitating natural elephant habitats and migration routes.
- Reducing Conflict: Mitigating conflicts between humans and elephants in shared areas.
- Managing Human Activities: Regulating human and livestock activities in elephant habitats to minimize disruptions.
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