AI Article Synopsis

  • African elephant calves are very social, and their development relies on interactions with other elephants, which can inform better management practices for their welfare.
  • Data from nine calves at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park showed that as the calves aged, they became more independent from their mothers and demonstrated frequent tactile interactions, although the number of initiations decreased with age.
  • Social play among calves was common, particularly with peers of similar age, but tended to decrease as they grew older, highlighting the importance of maintaining age-diverse groups in captivity for healthy social development.

Article Abstract

African elephant calves are highly social and their behavioral development depends heavily on interactions with other elephants. Evaluating early social behaviors offers important information that can inform management decisions and maximize individual- and population-level welfare. We use data collected from the population of elephants at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park in Escondido, CA to evaluate developmental trajectories of spatial independence and social behavior in nine elephant calves across a range of ages. As calves aged, the probability of being further from mothers also increased. Tactile interactions were common among calves, with all individuals either initiating or receiving physical touches from other elephants in a large proportion of focal scans. While the probability of initiating tactile interactions tended to decline with increases in calf age, the probability of receiving tactile interactions from other elephants remained invariant with regard to this variable. The social play was also common, occurring in a fifth of all focal scans. While there was evidence that social play tended to decline with increases in calf age, results suggest additional factors may be useful in characterizing patterns in play behavior at the individual level. Calves most frequently engaged in play with individuals of similar age but showed substantial variation in play partner choice. Results of this study suggest that maintaining groups of elephants in captivity with diverse age structure positively contribute to their healthy social development.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/zoo.21629DOI Listing

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