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African elephant
African elephant

 

Elephants

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Taxonomy

cellular organisms - Eukaryota - Fungi/Metazoa group - Metazoa - Eumetazoa - Bilateria - Coelomata - Deuterostomia - Chordata - Craniata - Vertebrata - Gnathostomata - Teleostomi - Euteleostomi - Sarcopterygii - Tetrapoda - Amniota - Mammalia - Theria - Eutheria - Afrotheria - Proboscidea - Elephantidae

The order Proboscidea (family Elephantidae) contains four genera of animals that are characterized by columnar limbs, bulky bodies, and elongated snouts (trunks): Loxodonta (extant species of African elephants), Elephas (four extant subspecies of Asiatic elephants and extinct species of dwarf and pygmy island elephants), Mammut (extinct species of American mastodon), and Mammuthus (extinct species of wolly mammoth).

The fossils of oldest known proboscidean Eritherium azzouzorum, dated about 60 million years ago (MYA), were found in Morocco (Africa). The estimated body mass of these animals varies between 3 and 8 kg (6.5 - 17.5 lbs).

Proboscideans are believed to share common ancestry with diverse group of animals included in supeorder Afrotheria. The Afrotheria are a recently described group of African origin containing the orders Proboscidea (elephants), Sirenia (manatees and dugongs), Hyracoidea (hyraxes), Macroscelidea (elephant shrews), Tubulidentata (aardvarks), and Afrosoricida (golden moles of the family Chrysochloridae and tenrecs and otter shrews of the family Tenrecidae).

Afrotheria superorder Picture credit: Honeycutt RL. J Biol. 2008; 7(3): 9.

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Brief facts

Youtube (ebbedded below): Loxodonta africana (African elephant) video (06/17/10): one elephant is drinking and another one is slapping mud on its back (6/19/2010)

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Elephant cognition

Being the largest among terrestrial animals, elephants also have the largest brains among terrestrial mammals, including the greatest volume of cerebral cortex. For ages the elephants were perceived as being highly sociable, cooperative, and intelligent animals, however, there are very few controlled experiments that support this perception. Because elephants' size and life style do not allow an easy laboratory setup, the studies of their behavior and cognitive abilities are usually confined to a limited number of experimental animals, who seems to vary widely in their mental capacities. Main trend is, however, very clear: elephants are very slow in learning and solving core tasks and problems routinely presented to primates and birds. However, many researchers argue that the conventional set of experimental problems is not relevant to elephant's survival in the fields and discuss the necessity of designing elephant-specific experiments to showcase their cognition, which is highly developed but is divergent from that of primates and birds. Elephants fail in tests designed for primates (and by primates) but excel in specific field problems requiring extensive long-term memory. Moreover, elephants exhibit behaviors that are highly unusual for non-human animals suggesting an existence of some elements of Theory of mind in their cognition. The following comparative table was derived mostly from Hart BL et al. (2008). "No data" means that we did not have definitive answers at time of the writing. It is possible that we will be able to fill the blanks later.

 

Parameter Elephants Great apes Birds
Tool use use branches to switch flies; throw stones at rodents; scratch with sticks crack nuts with stone; use stick to fish termites use sticks to fish invertebrate prey
Tool manufacture modify branches and sticks choose and modify sticks choose and modify sticks and wire to be hook-like
Insight behavior (understanding and/or learning how to get bait by pulling strings or moving obstacles, etc.) fail most of the time can solve and excel in learning can solve and learn easily
Visual discrimination (distinguish between shapes, colors, sizes) very poor learning ability learn easily learn easily
Spatial-temporal memory excel in remembering distant (hundreds of miles apart) water holes or foraging grounds for decades no data no data
Social memory (acoustic characteristics, chemosensory signals) can recognize calls of about 100 other elephants from various families and clans; can recognize family members after decades after separation no data no data
Self-awareness and recognition (can recognize its image in the mirror) documented documented, not considerably better than in elephants no data
Empathy to disabled/deceased conspecifics helping to injured or distressed conspecifics; recognition of remains of dead conspecifics (corpses as well as bones) characteristic to humans no data

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Comparison of African and Asian elephants

Parameter Laxodonta africana (African elephant) Elephas maximus (Asian elephant)
Breeding interval 4-9 years 3-4 years
Preferred breeding season rainy season throughout the year
Average number of offspring 1 1
Gestation period 22 months 18 - 22 months
Birth mass ~105 kg (~230 lbs) ~107 kg (~235.5 lbs)
Time to weaning ~6.5 years ~4 years
Age of reproductive maturity (male and female) ~11 years ~14 years
Approximate life span (in the wild - in captivity) 60 - 80 years 70 - 65 years
Adult mass 3600 - 6000 kg (7920 - 13200 lbs) 3000 - 5000 kg (6600 - 11000 lbs)

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Developmental stages (life cycle)

The following descriptions are based mostly on development of Loxodonta africana. However, embryonic development is similar in the both major elephant species (L. africana and E. maximus).

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African elephants (Loxodonta africana)

African elephant  in Maryland zoo

African elephant  in Maryland zoo

African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis)

Blake S et al. Roadless wilderness area determines forest elephant movements in the Congo Basin. PLoS One. 2008;3(10)

Forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis)

Borneo elephant (Elephas maximus)

Borneo Elephants: A High Priority for Conservation PLoS Biol. 2003 October; 1(1): e7.

Borneo elephant (Elephas maximus)

Asian elephant infant (Elephas maximus)

Thongtip N et al. Successful artificial insemination in the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) using chilled and frozen-thawed semen. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Jun 22.

Asian elephant (Elephas maximus)

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References

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