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>

>BBC DAILY E-MAIL: UK EDITION

>Thursday, 24 March, 2005, 9:00 GMT 01:00 -08:00:US/Pacific

>

>SCIENCE/NATURE

>

> * Elephants learn by sound mimicry *

>Elephants learn some of their calls through

>imitation, scientists report in this week's

>Nature magazine.

>Full story:

>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4377297.stm

>

 

Elephants learn by sound mimicry

Elephants learn some of their calls through

imitation, scientists report in this week's

Nature magazine.

 

They are the only land mammal, other than

primates, that can undeniably copy sounds, the

researchers claim.

 

The discovery was made when an orphan elephant

called Mlaika, who lived near a road, was

observed to make a series of convincing truck

sounds.

 

Under normal circumstances, vocal imitation is

probably used to cement bonds between elephants,

they added.

 

" Elephants may be using their learning abilities

to develop vocalisations similar to group

members, " said lead author Joyce Poole, of the

Amboseli Elephant Research Project, Kenya.

 

Social bonds

 

Vocal imitation has already been observed in

birds and marine mammals as well as primates.

 

Dr Poole believes it evolved to help maintain

bonds between individuals in a socially fluid

environment.

 

These findings electrified me

Peter Tyack, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

In other words, it helps two individuals remain

socially close, despite all the comings and

goings within their group.

 

" It may be, for example, that mothers and

daughters have similar voices, " said Dr Poole.

 

" And that could be one way how they recognise

each other amongst all the different voices. "

 

Although elephant rumbles are known to be

sophisticated and varied, the phenomenon of

mimicry was never observed before Mlaika's

creative use of it.

 

The 10-year-old lived in a semi-captive group of

orphaned elephants in Tsavo, Kenya.

 

Trucks were sometimes audible from her night

stockade, which lay 3km from the Nairobi-Mombasa

highway.

 

Scientists analysed her unusual rumbles and

found that they strongly resembled truck sounds

in frequency and pattern.

 

" These findings electrified me because no

terrestrial mammals other than primates are known

to be able to imitate sounds, " said co-author

Peter Tyack, from America's Woods Hole

Oceanographic Institution, who normally studies

whales.

 

" Birds, bats, dolphins and whales do so, but

learning of a whole new animal group capable of

vocal learning is fascinating. "

 

Rare skill

 

After Mlaika, the researchers also found an

irregular imitation in another elephant.

 

Calimero is a 23-year-old African male who has

spent most of his life in a Swiss zoo with Asian

elephants, who make a distinctive and unique

chirping sound.

 

Calimero also makes the Asian chirping sounds

and not the deeper African calls.

 

" It will be very interesting to see whether

African elephant groups have different dialects, "

said Dr Poole.

 

" But at the moment we don't know that. "

 

Dr Tyack added: " Our paper demonstrates vocal

learning and imitation, but only begins to open

the door to a fascinating new area for research

studying why elephants have evolved this rare

skill. "

 

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4377297.stm

 

Published: 2005/03/23 19:54:19 GMT

 

© BBC MMV

 

--

 

 

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