Garstang Michael, Davis Robert E, Leggett Keith, Frauenfeld Oliver W, Greco Steven, Zipser Edward, Peterson Michael
University of Virginia, Department of Environmental Sciences, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States of America.
Fowlers Gap Arid Zone Research Station, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 9;9(10):e108736. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108736. eCollection 2014.
The factors that trigger sudden, seasonal movements of elephants are uncertain. We hypothesized that savannah elephant movements at the end of the dry season may be a response to their detection of distant thunderstorms. Nine elephants carrying Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers were tracked over seven years in the extremely dry and rugged region of northwestern Namibia. The transition date from dry to wet season conditions was determined annually from surface- and satellite-derived rainfall. The distance, location, and timing of rain events relative to the elephants were determined using the Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) satellite precipitation observations. Behavioral Change Point Analysis (BCPA) was applied to four of these seven years demonstrating a response in movement of these elephants to intra- and inter-seasonal occurrences of rainfall. Statistically significant changes in movement were found prior to or near the time of onset of the wet season and before the occurrence of wet episodes within the dry season, although the characteristics of the movement changes are not consistent between elephants and years. Elephants in overlapping ranges, but following separate tracks, exhibited statistically valid non-random near-simultaneous changes in movements when rainfall was occurring more than 100 km from their location. While the environmental trigger that causes these excursions remains uncertain, rain-system generated infrasound, which can travel such distances and be detected by elephants, is a possible trigger for such changes in movement.
引发大象突然季节性迁徙的因素尚不确定。我们推测,旱季末期草原象的迁徙可能是它们察觉到远处雷暴的一种反应。在纳米比亚西北部极度干旱且地形崎岖的地区,对9头佩戴全球定位系统(GPS)接收器的大象进行了长达7年的追踪。每年根据地面和卫星观测的降雨量来确定从旱季到雨季的过渡日期。利用热带降雨测量任务(TRMM)卫星降水观测数据,确定降雨事件相对于大象的距离、位置和时间。对这7年中的4年应用行为变化点分析(BCPA),结果表明这些大象的迁徙对季节内和季节间的降雨事件有反应。尽管不同大象之间以及不同年份之间迁徙变化的特征并不一致,但在雨季开始之前或接近雨季开始时,以及旱季内出现降雨时段之前,都发现了迁徙的统计学显著变化。活动范围重叠但行踪各异的大象,当降雨发生在距离它们所在位置100多公里处时,其行动表现出统计学上有效的非随机近同步变化。虽然导致这些迁徙的环境触发因素仍不确定,但由降雨系统产生的次声能够传播如此远的距离并被大象察觉到,这可能是引发这种迁徙变化的一个因素。