Mulder Tom, Mortimer Beth, Ferwerda Jelle, Vollrath Fritz
Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
University of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 23;19(12):e0307520. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0307520. eCollection 2024.
Previous research indicates that African savanna elephants change their movements preceding or coincident with local rainfall and it has been suggested that they respond to thunder in remote storms-perhaps reading seismic cues. We therefore aimed to test if elephants in Northern Kenya adhere to distinct daytime movement states between the wet and dry periods, and whether their abrupt movement changes precede local wet periods in response to lightning strikes from a specific compass heading. In our study site, lightning to the North and East often preceded local rainfall and could possibly be used to anticipate local wet periods, but local rainfall appears a more likely trigger of behavioural change. While some abrupt movement changes occurred ahead of local wet periods, they were only particularly frequent shortly following the onset of wet periods. These findings do not concur with reports of Namibian elephants that generally changed their movement behaviour preceding local rainfall, and the additional exploration of individual behaviours in the present study likewise did not provide compelling evidence of a generic reliance on remote thunder cues by Northern-Kenyan elephants. Nonetheless, the GPS tracks of elephants indicated that daytime movement velocities differed between wet and dry periods. Specifically, elephants were generally in a slow-moving state during the day through wet periods, and in a fast-moving state during the day through dry periods. There is a further indication that some elephants compensated for slow daytime speeds by moving faster at night. This shift towards increased nocturnal activity may become more common with climate change and may slightly reduce elephant foraging efficiency. We conclude that climate change makes a strong case for studying elephant behaviours in response to environmental cues during the day and night, especially in dry-land study sites like Northern Kenya.
先前的研究表明,非洲稀树草原象在当地降雨之前或降雨期间会改变它们的活动,有人提出它们会对远处风暴中的雷声做出反应——也许是读取地震信号。因此,我们旨在测试肯尼亚北部的大象在湿润期和干旱期之间是否遵循不同的白天活动状态,以及它们突然的活动变化是否会在当地湿润期之前,以应对来自特定罗盘方向的雷击。在我们的研究地点,来自北方和东方的闪电常常先于当地降雨,并且有可能被用来预测当地的湿润期,但当地降雨似乎更有可能是行为变化的触发因素。虽然一些突然的活动变化发生在当地湿润期之前,但它们只在湿润期开始后不久特别频繁。这些发现与纳米比亚大象的报道不一致,纳米比亚大象通常在当地降雨之前改变它们的活动行为,并且本研究中对个体行为的进一步探索同样没有提供令人信服的证据,证明肯尼亚北部的大象普遍依赖远处的雷声信号。尽管如此,大象的GPS轨迹表明,湿润期和干旱期白天的活动速度有所不同。具体来说,大象在湿润期白天通常处于缓慢移动状态,而在干旱期白天处于快速移动状态。还有迹象表明,一些大象通过在夜间更快地移动来弥补白天的慢速。随着气候变化,这种向夜间活动增加的转变可能会变得更加普遍,并且可能会略微降低大象的觅食效率。我们得出结论,气候变化有力地说明了有必要研究大象在白天和夜间对环境线索的行为反应,特别是在像肯尼亚北部这样的旱地研究地点。