Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.

Determining the age of individuals in a population can lead to a better understanding of population dynamics through age structure analysis and estimation of age-specific fecundity and survival rates. Shoulder height has been used to accurately assign age to free-ranging African savanna elephants. H...

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Main Authors: Morgan J Trimble, Rudi J van Aarde, Sam M Ferreira, Camilla F Nørgaard, Johan Fourie, Phyllis C Lee, Cynthia J Moss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197571?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-204edd08433c4d53b3b97616f830baa52020-11-25T02:04:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01610e2661410.1371/journal.pone.0026614Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.Morgan J TrimbleRudi J van AardeSam M FerreiraCamilla F NørgaardJohan FouriePhyllis C LeeCynthia J MossDetermining the age of individuals in a population can lead to a better understanding of population dynamics through age structure analysis and estimation of age-specific fecundity and survival rates. Shoulder height has been used to accurately assign age to free-ranging African savanna elephants. However, back length may provide an analog measurable in aerial-based surveys. We assessed the relationship between back length and age for known-age elephants in Amboseli National Park, Kenya, and Addo Elephant National Park, South Africa. We also compared age- and sex-specific back lengths between these populations and compared adult female back lengths across 11 widely dispersed populations in five African countries. Sex-specific Von Bertalanffy growth curves provided a good fit to the back length data of known-age individuals. Based on back length, accurate ages could be assigned relatively precisely for females up to 23 years of age and males up to 17. The female back length curve allowed more precise age assignment to older females than the curve for shoulder height does, probably because of divergence between the respective growth curves. However, this did not appear to be the case for males, but the sample of known-age males was limited to ≤27 years. Age- and sex-specific back lengths were similar in Amboseli National Park and Addo Elephant National Park. Furthermore, while adult female back lengths in the three Zambian populations were generally shorter than in other populations, back lengths in the remaining eight populations did not differ significantly, in support of claims that growth patterns of African savanna elephants are similar over wide geographic regions. Thus, the growth curves presented here should allow researchers to use aerial-based surveys to assign ages to elephants with greater precision than previously possible and, therefore, to estimate population variables.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197571?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morgan J Trimble
Rudi J van Aarde
Sam M Ferreira
Camilla F Nørgaard
Johan Fourie
Phyllis C Lee
Cynthia J Moss
spellingShingle Morgan J Trimble
Rudi J van Aarde
Sam M Ferreira
Camilla F Nørgaard
Johan Fourie
Phyllis C Lee
Cynthia J Moss
Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Morgan J Trimble
Rudi J van Aarde
Sam M Ferreira
Camilla F Nørgaard
Johan Fourie
Phyllis C Lee
Cynthia J Moss
author_sort Morgan J Trimble
title Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
title_short Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
title_full Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
title_fullStr Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
title_full_unstemmed Age determination by back length for African savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
title_sort age determination by back length for african savanna elephants: extending age assessment techniques for aerial-based surveys.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Determining the age of individuals in a population can lead to a better understanding of population dynamics through age structure analysis and estimation of age-specific fecundity and survival rates. Shoulder height has been used to accurately assign age to free-ranging African savanna elephants. However, back length may provide an analog measurable in aerial-based surveys. We assessed the relationship between back length and age for known-age elephants in Amboseli National Park, Kenya, and Addo Elephant National Park, South Africa. We also compared age- and sex-specific back lengths between these populations and compared adult female back lengths across 11 widely dispersed populations in five African countries. Sex-specific Von Bertalanffy growth curves provided a good fit to the back length data of known-age individuals. Based on back length, accurate ages could be assigned relatively precisely for females up to 23 years of age and males up to 17. The female back length curve allowed more precise age assignment to older females than the curve for shoulder height does, probably because of divergence between the respective growth curves. However, this did not appear to be the case for males, but the sample of known-age males was limited to ≤27 years. Age- and sex-specific back lengths were similar in Amboseli National Park and Addo Elephant National Park. Furthermore, while adult female back lengths in the three Zambian populations were generally shorter than in other populations, back lengths in the remaining eight populations did not differ significantly, in support of claims that growth patterns of African savanna elephants are similar over wide geographic regions. Thus, the growth curves presented here should allow researchers to use aerial-based surveys to assign ages to elephants with greater precision than previously possible and, therefore, to estimate population variables.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3197571?pdf=render
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