Allen Connie R B, Croft Darren P, Testard Camille, Brent Lauren J N
Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK.
Elephants for Africa, 5 Balfour Road, London N5 2HB, UK.
Animals (Basel). 2021 Sep 17;11(9):2718. doi: 10.3390/ani11092718.
A common behavioural interaction between male African elephants is for an actor to direct his trunk to contact a same sex conspecific's mouth, temporal gland, or genital region. Such behaviours are often referred to as "greetings". Along with its inherent tactile element, these behaviours also likely provide olfactory information to actors concerning aspects of the target's phenotype, including sexual status, feeding history, individual identity, and emotional state. Here, we explore whether the age and novelty of potential interactors affect the choice of individuals targeted by male African elephants for these trunks to scent emitting organ (SEO) behaviours at social hotspots in a male-dominated area. Male elephants of all ages, except older adolescents aged 16-20 years, preferentially targeted elephants of the same age class for trunk-to-SEO behaviours. Elephants younger than 26 years did not direct trunk-to-SEO behaviours to mature bulls (26+ years) more than expected by chance, suggesting these behaviours are not primarily used for younger males to establish contact with, or obtain information from or about older, more experienced individuals. We also found no evidence that males directed these behaviours preferentially to new individuals they encountered at male aggregations (compared to those they arrived in groups with), suggesting these behaviours are not primarily employed by males as a reunion display to establish relationships between new individuals or update relationships between familiar individuals separated over time. Age-mates may be preferentially targeted with these behaviours as a means to facilitate further interaction with partners (e.g., for sparring activity), or as a safe way to assess relative dominance rank in similarly aged and hence, size and strength, matched dyads. Our results suggest male African elephants use close contact trunk-to-SEO behaviours continuously over time, to facilitate positive relationships, test willingness to interact, and assess aspects of phenotype, between males occupying the same ecological space.
雄性非洲象之间常见的一种行为互动是,一方将象鼻伸向同性同类的嘴、颞腺或生殖器区域。这种行为通常被称为“问候”。除了其固有的触觉元素外,这些行为还可能为行为者提供有关目标个体表型方面的嗅觉信息,包括性状态、进食历史、个体身份和情绪状态。在此,我们探讨潜在互动对象的年龄和新奇性是否会影响雄性非洲象在雄性主导区域的社交热点选择这些将象鼻伸向气味散发器官(SEO)行为的目标个体。除了16 - 20岁的大龄青少年外,所有年龄段的雄性大象在将象鼻伸向SEO行为时都优先选择同年龄段的大象。26岁以下的大象将象鼻伸向SEO行为的对象并非成熟公牛(26岁以上)的概率并不高于随机预期,这表明这些行为并非主要用于年轻雄性与年长、更有经验的个体建立联系、获取信息或了解他们。我们也没有发现证据表明雄性会将这些行为优先指向它们在雄性聚集处遇到的新个体(与那些和它们一起成群到达的个体相比),这表明这些行为并非主要被雄性用作一种团聚展示,以建立新个体之间的关系或更新随着时间分开的熟悉个体之间的关系。同龄个体可能会被优先选择进行这些行为,以此作为促进与伙伴进一步互动(例如用于争斗活动)的一种方式,或者作为一种安全的方式来评估在年龄相仿、因此体型和力量相当的二元组中相对的优势等级。我们的结果表明,雄性非洲象会随着时间持续使用紧密接触的象鼻伸向SEO行为,以促进积极关系、测试互动意愿以及评估占据相同生态空间的雄性之间的表型特征。