Elephant Moms Help Daughters on First Dates

hcroze's picture
Thu, 2010-04-22 06:10 by hcroze · Forum/category:

A new paper led by one of our research collaborators, Lucy Bates from St. Andrews University, has shown it is quite likely that experienced females demonstrate to their naive young daughters in their first oestrus how to attract the attention of appropriate bulls.

It's another example of the amazing depth and subtlety of elephant behaviour that we can only come to understand through our long-term research.

The paper – Bates LA, Handford R, Lee PC, Njiraini N, Poole JH, Sayialel K, Sayialel S, Moss C and Byrne RW. (2010) Why Do African Elephants (Loxodonta africana) Simulate Oestrus? An Analysis of Longitudinal Data. PLoS ONE 5(4): e10052. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0010052 – can be found here.

Abstract

Female African elephants signal oestrus via chemicals in their urine, but they also exhibit characteristic changes to their posture, gait and behaviour when sexually receptive. Free-ranging females visually signal receptivity by holding their heads and tails high, walking with an exaggerated gait, and displaying increased tactile behaviour towards males. Parous females occasionally exhibit these visual signals at times when they are thought not to be cycling and without attracting interest from musth males. Using demographic and behavioural records spanning a continuous 28-year period, we investigated the occurrence of this ‘‘simulated’’ oestrus behaviour. We show that parous females in the Amboseli elephant population do simulate receptive oestrus behaviours, and this false oestrus occurs disproportionately in the presence of naïve female kin who are observed coming into oestrus for the first time. We compare several alternative hypotheses for the occurrence of this simulation:

  1. false oestrus has no functional purpose (e.g., it merely results from abnormal hormonal changes);
  2. false oestrus increases the reproductive success of the simulating female, by inducing sexual receptivity; and
  3. false oestrus increases the inclusive fitness of the simulating female, either by increasing the access of related females to suitable males, or by encouraging appropriate oestrus behaviours from female relatives who are not responding correctly to males.

Although the observed data do not fully conform to the predictions of any of these hypotheses, we rule out the first two, and tentatively suggest that parous females most likely exhibit false oestrus behaviours in order to demonstrate to naïve relatives at whom to direct their behaviour.

Elephant Rites of Passage

Thu, 2010-04-22 22:11 by niall anderson

Thank you, Harvey, for this fascinating post: it demonstrates clearly the ongoing closeness of relationship between elephant mothers and their female offspring as daughters reach first oestrus. I recall the episode with Emily Kate and Echo, to which Anna has already referred and Echo's strategy certainly supported and educated her daughter. I also recall, from the second film in the Echo Trilogy, Erin's obvious concern at trying to protect Edwina through her oestrus, vetting the bulls who approached and ultimately settling for Big George; despite the obvious support of her mother, Edwina ended up with a broken leg: do you think that Erin's own inexperience at the mother support role in this situation (Edwina being her first calf) might, in part, have been why she was unable to stop Edwina running away, pursued by bulls and returning, out of oestrus, with a broken leg?

Emily Kate & 22 month's ago!

Thu, 2010-04-22 12:49 by Anna Martinsson

So true and I think that this behaviour is just one more indication of the complex world of elephant behaviour that is being uncovered, especially with the older and more experienced mothers.
I remember reading Cynthia's updates here from June 2008 when Echo most likely was trying to steer and guide her young and very much naïve daughter Emily Kate in her first symptoms of oestrus, if I get my calculations right that was exactly 22 month ago now, I take it Emily Kate is still a young care free adolescence with no new addition added to the EB's in tow :-)..
I was thinking at the time she was still so young (just coming up to 8 years old) but she did have the advantage at the time of having her vastly experienced mother there with her for what might have been a somewhat awkward moment in a young female Elephant life…. Thank you for posting this report..

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