Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)

Habituation is a major concern for the development of effective, long-term human-wildlife conflict mitigation and zoo enrichment programs. Elephants are cognitive species that exhibit many types of learning, such as associative, social, and insight learning. However, no study has examined the habitu...

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Main Authors: Sarah E. Goodyear, Bruce A. Schulte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Animal Behavior and Cognition 2015-11-01
Series:Animal Behavior and Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/8/01.Goodyear_Schulte_Final_2.pdf
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spelling doaj-be7dd619434b4f2fadd0c79ae7a416e42020-11-24T21:25:07ZengAnimal Behavior and CognitionAnimal Behavior and Cognition2372-50522372-43232015-11-012429231210.12966/abc.11.01.2015Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)Sarah E. GoodyearBruce A. SchulteHabituation is a major concern for the development of effective, long-term human-wildlife conflict mitigation and zoo enrichment programs. Elephants are cognitive species that exhibit many types of learning, such as associative, social, and insight learning. However, no study has examined the habituation process in elephants. Elephants possess a well-developed sensory system and may habituate to stimuli that could be used for enrichment and/or management. The aim of this study was to examine their habituation process in response to repeated presentations of two auditory stimuli: buzzing by a disturbed beehive and the sound created by banging on pots and pans, and in comparison to no sound trials. The selected sounds often invoke alert behaviors and movements in wild elephants as part of human-elephant conflict mitigation. We predicted that elephants would initially exhibit strong reactions to both sounds, but these responses would diminish over repeated trials. This study was conducted with four female African elephants (Loxodonta africana) at the Nashville Zoo in Tennessee. During the first sound presentation, the elephants reacted by showing distress, avoidance, and vigilance behaviors. Over repeated presentations, their reactions to the sounds diminished to levels observed during the no-sound trials, suggesting habituation had occurred. The elephants also reduced their response to the second sound more rapidly than to the first sound, suggesting that generalization of their habituation had occurred. The results support our hypothesis that elephants use habituation to learn which stimuli are non-threatening and subsequently stop responding to them. Habituation is an important learning process that should be considered during the implementation of captive and wildlife management, especially for highly intelligent species, such as elephants.http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/8/01.Goodyear_Schulte_Final_2.pdfLearningCrop raidingHuman-elephant conflictHuman-wildlife conflictEnrichment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah E. Goodyear
Bruce A. Schulte
spellingShingle Sarah E. Goodyear
Bruce A. Schulte
Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
Animal Behavior and Cognition
Learning
Crop raiding
Human-elephant conflict
Human-wildlife conflict
Enrichment
author_facet Sarah E. Goodyear
Bruce A. Schulte
author_sort Sarah E. Goodyear
title Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
title_short Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
title_full Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
title_fullStr Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
title_full_unstemmed Habituation to Auditory Stimuli by Captive African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)
title_sort habituation to auditory stimuli by captive african elephants (loxodonta africana)
publisher Animal Behavior and Cognition
series Animal Behavior and Cognition
issn 2372-5052
2372-4323
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Habituation is a major concern for the development of effective, long-term human-wildlife conflict mitigation and zoo enrichment programs. Elephants are cognitive species that exhibit many types of learning, such as associative, social, and insight learning. However, no study has examined the habituation process in elephants. Elephants possess a well-developed sensory system and may habituate to stimuli that could be used for enrichment and/or management. The aim of this study was to examine their habituation process in response to repeated presentations of two auditory stimuli: buzzing by a disturbed beehive and the sound created by banging on pots and pans, and in comparison to no sound trials. The selected sounds often invoke alert behaviors and movements in wild elephants as part of human-elephant conflict mitigation. We predicted that elephants would initially exhibit strong reactions to both sounds, but these responses would diminish over repeated trials. This study was conducted with four female African elephants (Loxodonta africana) at the Nashville Zoo in Tennessee. During the first sound presentation, the elephants reacted by showing distress, avoidance, and vigilance behaviors. Over repeated presentations, their reactions to the sounds diminished to levels observed during the no-sound trials, suggesting habituation had occurred. The elephants also reduced their response to the second sound more rapidly than to the first sound, suggesting that generalization of their habituation had occurred. The results support our hypothesis that elephants use habituation to learn which stimuli are non-threatening and subsequently stop responding to them. Habituation is an important learning process that should be considered during the implementation of captive and wildlife management, especially for highly intelligent species, such as elephants.
topic Learning
Crop raiding
Human-elephant conflict
Human-wildlife conflict
Enrichment
url http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/8/01.Goodyear_Schulte_Final_2.pdf
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