2 research outputs found
Field evidence supporting monitoring of chemical information on pathways by male African elephants
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordData Statement:
Due to the sensitive nature of reporting on African elephant locations and numbers, the data
that support the findings of this study are available on reasonable request from the
corresponding author.When animals move along well-established pathways, sensory cues along the path may provide
valuable information concerning other individuals that have used the same route. Yet the extent
to which animals use pathways as sources of public social information is poorly understood.
Here we quantify wild African savannah elephants (Loxodonta africana) responsiveness to
olfactory information along natural elephant pathways, habitual routes that link predictable
critical resources in the environment. By monitoring the behaviour of elephants travelling on
pathways in a predominantly male study population, we found that elephants were highly
olfactorily responsive to pathway substrate. Lone travellers were more responsive than
elephants travelling in groups, suggesting elephants without social companions may be more
dependent on olfactory cues on pathways during navigation. Furthermore, by experimentally
presenting olfactory cues on pathways we provide evidence that male African elephants exhibit
focused olfactory responses to urine cues of same-sex conspecifics for at least 48 hours from
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time of deposition, and that urine from adult elephants was more likely to elicit vomeronasal
system responses compared to subadult urine. African elephants may therefore potentially be
able to discern the age and maturity of individuals they can expect to encounter in the
environment from remote urine cues on pathways. We suggest elephant pathways act as a
public information resource, assisting navigating elephants via the deposition of urine and dung
by previous travellers on the route. These results could help inform elephant management,
which may manipulate olfactory information on pathways in high human-wildlife conflict
areas, or could use olfactory urine cues to improve the efficiency of corridors that link protected
areas for elephants.Leverhulme TrustExplorers Club Exploration FundWilderness Wildlife TrustIDEAWIL