News Release
Elephants Imitate Sounds as a Form of Social Communication
Join birds, bats and dolphins as vocal learners
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
March 24, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Elephants learn to imitate sounds that are not typical of their
species, the first known example after humans of vocal learning in a
non-primate terrestrial mammal. The discovery, reported in today’s Nature,
further supports the idea that vocal learning is important for
maintaining individual social relationships among animals that separate
and reunite over time, like dolphins and whales, some birds, and bats.
Researchers from the Amboseli Trust for Elephants in Kenya, the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution and the University of Vienna studied
sounds made by two African elephants, one living among semi-captive
orphaned elephants and the other with two Asian elephants in a
zoo. One imitated truck noises heard from a nearby highway, the
other the chirps of another elephant species.
In both cases, the sounds were totally different from sounds made by
other normal calf, adolescent and adult African elephants and very
similar to recorded sounds that were common in the auditory environment
of the subjects of this study. Spectrogram analyses of the audio
frequency of the imitations were nearly perfect matches to the original
sounds.
Mlaika, a ten-year-old adolescent female African elephant living in
Kenya among a group of semi-captive orphans, mimicked noises she heard
from trucks on a highway nearly two miles away. Her imitations of
the trucks sounded much like recorded truck sounds and nothing like
normal calls of African elephants. Mlaika did not appear to imitate
particular trucks as she was hearing them, but rather seemed to use
generalized truck sounds as the model for her imitation.
Calimero, a 23-year-old male African elephant who lived for 18 years
with two female Asian elephants in a Swiss zoo, was a nearly perfect
mimic for the chirp-like calls of his long-time zoo mates. The
chirps are made by Asian elephants but not by African elephants.
Calimero often mimicked the chirps but rarely made any other sounds.
“Many species with similar social systems as elephants use vocal
imitation to maintain individual-specific relationships, “study
co-author Stephanie Watwood of WHOI said. “Our study suggests
that elephants may be using their vocal learning abilities in a similar
manner, and opens a fascinating new area for research on how elephants
use vocal learning.”
Vocal learning is important because it enables an open communication
system in which animals and humans develop new signals with shared
associations. Recent playback experiments conducted by Karen McComb of
Sussex University have shown that elephants can remember the calls of a
large number of other elephants. The new findings suggest that
elephants, like parrots, bats, and dolphins, may use vocal learning to
develop new communication signals for maintaining complex
individual-specific social relationships, study co-author Peter Tyack
of WHOI said. Tyack has studied the social behavior and acoustics
signals of marine mammals, especially dolphins and whales, for decades.
“It is exciting to see that African savannah elephants follow a pattern
we’ve seen in other terrestrial and aquatic species capable of vocal
learning, “Tyack said. “Vocal learning should also occur in other
species where long-lived social bonds are based on individual
relationships and where members of a group separate and reunite over
time.”
The study was funded by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Originally published: March 24, 2005

