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Elephant Sense and Sensibility

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by Michael Garstang


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  Supplemental Bibliography

  Research in elephant behavior is progressing rapidly. Papers and reports pub-

  lished since completing the text and of interest to the work are listed below but

  not cited in the text.

  COMMUNICATION

  Partan, S.R., 2013. Ten unanswered questions in multimodal communication. Behav. Ecol. Socio-

  biol. 67, 1523–1539.

  Stoeger, A.S., de Silva, S., 2014. African and Asian elephant vocal communication: a cross-species

  comparison. In: Witzany, G. (Ed.), Biocommunication of Animals. Springer Science, Dor-

  drecht, pp. 21–39 (chapter 3).

  Stoeger, A.S., Zeppelzauer, M., Baotic, A., 2014. Age-group estimation in free-ranging African

  elephants based on acoustic cues of low-frequency rumbles. Bioacoustics 23, 231–246.

  Zeppelzauer, M., Hensman, S., Stoeger, A.S., 2014. Towards an automated acoustic detection system

  for free-ranging elephants. Bioacoustics 23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09524622.2014.906321.

  BEHAVIOR

  de Silva, S., 2014. How does empathy help elephants? http://asianelephant.wordpress.com/2014/03/03/

  how-does-empathy-help-elephants/.

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  ConflictResolution.

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  raiding elephants: field trials in northern Kenya. Afr. J. Ecol. 49, 431–439.

  Kuiper, T.R., Parker, D.M., 2014. Elephants in Africa: big, grey biodiversity thieves. S. Afr. J. Sci.

  110, 7–9.

  Landman, M., Kerley, G.I., 2014. Elephants both increase and decrease availability of browse

  resources for black rhinoceros. Biotropica 46, 42–49.

  Morell, V., 2014. It’s time to accept that elephants, like us, are empathetic beings. http://news.

  nationalgeogrpahic.com/news/2014/02/140221-elephants-poaching-empathy-grief/.

  Plotnik, J.M., de Waal, F.B.M., 2014. Asian elephants ( Elephas maximum) reassure others in dis-

  tress. Peer J 2, e278.

  Shannon, G., Slotow, R., Durant, S.M., Sayialel, K.N., Poole, J., Moss, C., McComb, K., 2013. Ef-

  fects of social disruption in elephants persist decades after culling. Front. Zool. 10, 62.

  Soltis, J., King, L.E., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Vollrath, F., Savage, A., 2014. African elephant alarm

  calls distinguish between threats from humans and bees. PLoS One 9, e89403.

  127

  128 Supplemental Bibliography

  INTELLIGENCE

  Borenstein, S., 2014. Elephants prove discerning listeners of us humans. http://bigstory.ap.org/

  article/elephants-prove-discerning-listeners-us-humans.

  Jabr, F., 2014. Searching for the elephant’s genius inside the largest brain on land. Sci. Am. (Febr-uary). http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/brainwaves/2014/02/26/searching-for-the-elephants-

  genius-inside-the-largest-brain-on-land/.

  MOVEMENT

  Barua, M., 2013. Circulating elephants: unpacking the geographies of a cosmopolitan animal.

  Trans. Inst. British Geograph. 39, 559–573.

  Jach
owski, D.S., Montgomery, R.A., Slotow, R., Millspaugh, J.J., 2013. Unravelling complex as-

  sociations between physiological state and movement of African elephants. Funct. Ecol. 27,

  1166–1175.

  LEARNING

  Stoeger, A.S., Manger, P., 2014. Vocal learning in elephants: neural bases and adaptive context.

  Curr. Opin. Neurobiol. 28, 101–107.

  Index

  Note: Page numbers followed by f indicate figures and t indicate tables.

  A

  Calling rate, 67, 68

  Abiotic sounds, 69–72, 88, 100

  Call types, 73, 74 t

  Addo Elephant National Park, 75, 111,

  Chemical communication, olfaction and, 22

  112, 115 f

  Chemical detection, sensitive olfactory and,

  African savanna elephants (Loxodonta

  23–24

  africana), 1, 2 f, 10

  Circuses, elephants in, 110

  Agitation, 50–51

  Click language, 76

  Alarm calls, 43

  Cognitive ability, 3, 55, 77 f

  Altruism, 27, 48

  Collective signals, 97

  Amboseli Elephant Research Project, 114

  Communication

  Amboseli elephants, 35

  abiotic sounds, 69–72

  Amboseli National Park, 48, 87

  high-frequency sound, 63

  Amygdala, 19

  and human language, 55

  Angolan civil war, 1

  individual recognition and, 55

  Angola’s Luiana Partial Reserve, 1–3

  language and, 91

  Animals, Emotions and Morality: Marking the

  listener’s behavior, 55

  Boundary (Dixon), 29

  low-frequency sound, 63, 67 f, 70

  Askaris, 35–36, 36 f, 37 f

  range of elephant calls, 64–66

  Atmosphere, communication and, 62–64

  role of the atmosphere, 62–64

  Auditory system, 16

  sound detection, 59–61, 60 f

  sound generation, 56–59

  sound location, 61–62

  B

  times and frequency of call, 66–69

  Behavior

  Compassion, 29

  components of, 47

  Conscious brain, 15, 17

  instinctual, 91

  Conscious signals, 97

  and intelligence, 83

  Contact calls, 35

  morality, 39, 40

  Contextual calls, 73, 74 t

  patterns, 39

  Cooperation cluster, 40

  rational, 76

  Corpuscles, pacinian, 16

 

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