When faced with danger, humans are likely to yell in alarm (for - TopicsExpress



          

When faced with danger, humans are likely to yell in alarm (for instance, BEAR!!) while looking to get out of harms way. So, too, do elephants. And in research published late last month in Plos One, a team from Oxford University, Save the Elephants and Disneys Animal Kingdom reveal elephants may have developed a specific alarm for Human! By playing audio recordings of the Samburu, a tribe in northern Kenya, to African elephants in Kenya, researchers found the elephants went on alert and ran from the sound, all while emitting a distinctive low rumble (click here for audio). The team then recorded that rumble, and played it to other elephants, who reacted similarly to the first group, as though humans were near. We concede the possibility that these alarm calls are simply a byproduct of elephants running away, that is, just an emotional response to the threat that other elephants pick up on, one of the researchers, Dr. Lucy King, told Oxford Universitys science blog. On the other hand, we think it is also possible that the rumble alarms are akin to words in human language, and that elephants voluntarily and purposefully make those alarm calls to warn others about specific threats. Our research results here show that African elephant alarm calls can differentiate between two types of threat and reflect the level of urgency of that threat. In 2010, researchers discovered elephants also have a distinctive bee alarm rumble, which, when played, causes the animals to flee while shaking their heads, likely an attempt to kill the insects. The unique responses to each different rumble has led scientists to postulate that elephants have more sophisticated verbal communication than previously realized. The acoustic analysis [of the rumbles] showed that the difference between the bee alarm rumble and the human alarm rumble is the same as a vowel-change in human language, which can change the meaning of words (think of boo and bee), Dr. King explained to the Oxford blog. Elephants use similar vowel-like changes in their rumbles to differentiate the type of threat they experience, and so give specific warnings to other elephants who can decipher the sounds. African elephants are considered a vulnerable species as a result of poaching and a loss of habitat.
Posted on: Mon, 10 Mar 2014 06:41:27 +0000

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