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Order Proboscidea: the
Elephants
One living Family, two living genera, 2 living species.
For most of our species-existence, most people have
lived with elephants. As we move through the 21st
century, this co-existence is becoming increasingly
difficult!
The plan for the day:
• Ancestry and evolution
• Range and Status
• Anatomy
• Size
• Legs
• Trunk (including some weird speculation on evolutionary origins)
• Tusks & skull
• Cheek teeth
• Basic ecology (eating even the worst plants)
• Metabolism (be big)
• Social organization (center on females)
• Specifics on Asian elephants (including conservation)
• Conservation of African elephants
Ancestry and Evolution
• Elephants should probably be considered part
of the Afrotheria. Closest living relatives are
seacows and hyraxes (see next slide).
• Earliest proboscideans were tapir-like.
• Evolutionary trends were deepening the teeth,
shortening skull, lengthening trunk and legs.
• Elephas & Mammuthus evolved in Africa; they
were most modern elephants, invading Eurasia,
North America and finally South America.
• Loxodonta, more primitive, survived in Africa.
They may not look like elephants, but…
• An ancient branch of the Afrotheria evolved to exploit “low-
quality” vegetation.
• One “twig” of the branch became aquatic (seacows, upper left).
• Another “twig” invaded xeric habitats (hyraxes; upper right;
once some types were much bigger).
• The third “twig” exploited intermediate habitats and became
elephants.
• Note the
complexity of
the
Proboscidean
tree.
• Many
taxonomists
would show
Mammuthus
branching
even later
from Elephas.
• Note that
Mammut,
Mammuthus,
and Stegodon
survived until
relatively
recent times.
1
1
2
New dates:
1 7.6MYBP
2 6.7MYBP
Range and status today
• Loxodonta: Once pan-African, now intra-tropical.
– In plains and savannas, African elephants are now largely
restricted to hunting preserves and national parks.
– In thick forest, status less well known (but may be common).
• Elephas: Once widely distributed from India
throughout continental S.E. Asia and into southern
China. Now very rare.
– Working elephants in Myanmar; tourist elephants elsewhere.
– Wild elephants in Indian national parks– and a few are
widely scattered in some other national parks.
• Almost everywhere they occur, elephants are often
considered more valuable (or less trouble) dead than
alive. Nowadays, people have the equipment to make
‘em that way.
Dimensions of
Elephants
African elephant:
Shoulder height:
XX: 2.4-3.4m
XY: 3.0-4.0m
Mass:
XX: 2400-3500kg
XY: 4000-6300kg
Asian Elephant:
Shoulder ht: 2.5-3.0m
Mass: 3500-5000kg
Elephant legs are
graviportal.
• Bones are large and
“stacked.”
• Elephant walks on 5
toes & heel pad.
• Elephants move long
distances– for food,
for water, for sex,
maybe for fun.
• Elephants don’t run:
– Typical elephant walk
is like brisk human
walk.
– Fastest walk is like
top human sprint.
Evolutionary
elongation of the
trunk
• Apparent paradox:
– Short trunk is useless to
tall grazer
– Evolving structure must
be useful at all stages.
• Ancient elephants:
relatively short legs &
trunk that reached
ground.
• Intermediate elephants:
longer legs, longer skull,
longer jaws, longer
trunk– that reached
ground.
• …then trunk stays on
the ground as skull and
jaw shortened.
• But
The conventional history of elephant
evolution: Terrestrial ancestor of
Afrotherian megavertebrates gives rise
to elephants, seacows, and hyraxes.
The trunk of elephant ancestor
lengthens in accompaniment with
lengthening legs.
A Garrettian (=
wild-ass,
contrarian)
trunk-centered
hypothesis on
elephant
evolution
• The structure of elephant lungs and
thoracic cavity suggests adaptation for
snorkeling.
– Anatomical adaptations are numerous and
profound.
– These adaptations cannot easily be
accounted for by use of the trunk for
terrestrial drinking.
• Did snorkeling adaptations occur early?
– Identical structures exist in Asian and African
elephants.
• Early snorkeling adaptations would
suggest that elephants evolved from
aquatic animals.
– The logical candidate would be some
ancestor shared w/ seacows (conventional).
– The question is, was that ancestor aquatic?
– If so, the lengthening of the trunk might have
preceded the lengthening of the legs, which
would have occurred after an invasion of the
land, contrary to the conventional wisdom.
The snorkeling-elephant conundrum
(Note: We’re talking about
systemic circulation to
parietal pleura; pulmonary
circulation is protected by
“Zone 2 Phenomenon.”)
Anatomy suggests
that snorkeling
adaptations may
have been
fundamental.
• The vulnerable pleural
membranes are replaced by
thick plates of dense
connective tissue.
• The “pleural cavity” itself is
filled with loose connective
tissue.
• The diaphragm is much
thicker than would be
expected for an animal of
elephant size.
• All these adaptations (and
others) are observable early
in embryonic development.
• But we’ve digressed long
enough; back to the trunk
Remember: The origin of
these adaptations must be
more than 7.6MYBP.
Uses of the trunk
• As a tool
– Grazing & browsing
– Manipulating objects
– Moving water
• As a sense organ
– Touch
– Smell
• As a social-signaling organ
– A trumpet that amplifies vocalizations
– A bearer of visual signals
– A touch-communicator
Tusks are next 
Evolution of tusks & skull
• Tusks are second upper
incisors. Tusks typically
emerge in XY & XX African
but only in XY Asian adults.
• Tusks’ utility and social
importance are enormous.
• Evolutionary tendency for
skull to shorten & tusks to
lengthen.
• The conservation
significance of tusks &
ivory….
• Now: Other teeth
Remember: The
trunk helps
maintain contact
with the ground
as the legs
lengthen.
Cheek teeth
• Shredding in
living sps &
mammoths;
crush-grinding
in mastodons.
• 6 molarform
teeth per jaw-
quadrant
• 1 functioning
tooth per
quadrant; loss
in front;
magazine
replacement
from rear (see
next 2 slides).
Elephant or mammoth
Mastodon
Not a member of the Elephantidae.
Elephant teeth & their replacement
To know about
elephant teeth is to
know about elephant
demography.
Schedule of Tooth Replacement
Tooth M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6
Ages of
use,
African
0-1
years
1-2
years
2-6
years
6-15
years
15-28
years
28-47
years
Ages of
use,
Asian
0-1
years
1-6
years
6-8.5
years
8.5-22.5
years
22.5-40
years
40-70
years
Note: African-elephant data are from wild animals; Asian-elephant
data are from captive, working animals.
Next, ecology
Basic ecological strategy
• Elephants grow very large, thereby decreasing
surface-to-volume ratio.
• This reduces per-kg thermoregulatory expenses and
therefore the amount of calories needed per kg body
mass. (See next slide for Kleiber Curve)
• Vast variety of plants eaten (Kibale, Uganda: 227 of
255 known species) but most food is usually from few
species.
• Absorptive efficiency is low, and elephants meet
minimal nutritional needs by eating large quantities of
OK food or vast quantities of wretched food.
• Elephants have the capacity to alter an environment–
and the mobility to move into a new area.
Elephant Metabolism
(C is “caloric expenses”; M is “Mass”; α & M are fitted constants)
• Some general principles
(Kleiber Curve):
• C = αMβ
• β is always < 1 (0.75+/-)
• Now figure expense/size
C/M = (αM0.75)/M
C/M = α/M0.25
• That is, expenses per kg
decline with increases in
body size.
• That is, elephants’ main
metabolic specialization
is to be BIG.
• Some elephant specifics:
• “Small” stomach, large
caecum.
• Feeding per day:
– 10-18 hours
– 150-250kg (c. 5% mass)
• Throughput time c. 11-
26 hours.
• Defecation per day: 150-
250kg
• Assimilation efficiency:
– Elephant: 44%
– Cow: 66%
Social organization
(Most data are from African elephants.)
• A baby elephant is born into a matriarchy after 21-
22mo. gestation. It receives much education, and
interbirth interval is typically 4-6 years.
– For 1st 6months, baby is watched all the time.
– Baby is weaned at 6-18 months (occasionally later).
– Until it’s almost 10 years old, juvenile spends c. 50% of its
time within 5m of its mother (closer in moments of danger).
• XX’s stay in natal group, cementing relationships
w/mothers, grandmas, sisters, aunts, XX cousins….
• Between ages 8-20yrs, XY’s think increasingly of sex
& become such pests that XX’s run them out of herd.
Thereafter they join bachelor society (next slide).
The machismo of
bachelor society
• Young males entering elephant
bachelor society learn their
places– or else.
• Size is the major factor in
establishing dominance.
• Mutsch temporarily over-rides
other considerations.
– Temporal glands drain, penis drips,
testosterone levels soar.
– Temper, temper….
• Skull structure cushions head-
bashing (pneumatic skull).
• Use of tusks is dangerous.
• Biggest XY occasionally return to
XX groups.
• Now, back to the more important
considerations of XX groups!
Long-lasting female groups form the
nucleus around which all elephant
society is organized!
Female groups & elephant commo
• Oldest XX is matriarch
– She knows the area & the elephants.
– She outlives repro years (only elephants and people); why?
• Interaction & commo holds group together
– Lots of touching and signaling
– Trunk-in-mouth greeting ceremony
– Low-frequency sounds
– Play builds tightest bonds among young XX cousins
• Courtship can be dramatic
– XX receptive for only a day or two (but she courts longer)
– Many XY’s may follow a receptive XX, but in a typical
elephant population, only a few become fathers.
The sociology and physiology of (African)
elephant ears: looking big and cooling off!
• Elephant social
processes are
mediated by size.
Threat or dominance
position has ears
extended.
• Ears also serve as
radiators.
– Each is right triangle,
1.5mX2m; total
surface is 6m2, or
about 20% of total.
– Mass of each ear is
about 20kg, or < 1%
of total.
– Blood-flow through
ears can be > 1000
liters/hr.
Next: A little on the sociality of Asian elephants
A few social specifics
on Asian elephants
• Lots like Loxodonta, but
haven’t shared common
ancestor for about 7.6MY
(people-chimps separation
is about 5MY.).
• Are Asian XY’s more
connected w/XX groups?
• It’s reported that Asian
XX’s may form communal
nursery groups. (Is this
true? If so, does this occur
in African elephants too?).
Uh, how do you tell an Asian elephant
from an African elephant?
• Well, if you’re in
Africa….
• Otherwise,
– African has larger ears.
– Asian has convex spinal
line; African has concave
spinal line.
– Two-lip trunk in African
elephant; Asian elephant
has single trunk-lip.
– Asian elephant usually
smaller.
– African XX usually have
emergent tusks.
Even with
these babies,
can’t you tell
which is which?
A general note on S.E. Asian conservation
• Although not particularly urban, S.E. Asia is
the most crowded area in the world.
• Intensive agriculture covers almost every
available hectare of reasonably flat land.
• Most vertebrate wildlife survives only in national
parks, many of which are also under threat.
• In 1975, Vietnam was thought to have many
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of elephants.
• Today population is probably < 100, in widely
separated small groups.
• Elephants interfere with local people.
Conservation of African elephants
• The subject is much more complex than most
“experts” would like to admit!
• Elephant demography makes harvest
potentially damaging to elephant populations.
• Prior to international ivory ban (enforced by
1989), different countries had experienced
different results with their management plans.
• Conservation decisions, which should have
been made on a biological basis, were driven
by largely political concerns.
• The arrogance of the “developed” world was
demonstrated yet again.
Conservation? In January 2008 the Philadelphia Zoo
announced that it would breed its African elephants to
help with species-conservation. The zoo also announced
the construction of a $27 million elephant exhibit. One
baby might be produced by 2010. Meanwhile, RSA will
start killing thousands of elephants in May 2008, and the
per-capita income in Zimbabwe is < $1/day.
For 2010,
cut by 50%
Elephant
conservation:
How does one
act responsibly
in a world of
limited
resources,
inequitably
distributed?
The future of elephants
• Elephants are not an
evolutionary dead-
end, not a taxon that
has outlived its
ecological capacity.
• Elephants are smart,
adaptable, modern–
and can live almost
anywhere on almost
any plant food.
• BUT more than any
other large mammal,
elephants are efficient
competitors with
people!

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Elephants.ppt

  • 1. Order Proboscidea: the Elephants One living Family, two living genera, 2 living species. For most of our species-existence, most people have lived with elephants. As we move through the 21st century, this co-existence is becoming increasingly difficult!
  • 2. The plan for the day: • Ancestry and evolution • Range and Status • Anatomy • Size • Legs • Trunk (including some weird speculation on evolutionary origins) • Tusks & skull • Cheek teeth • Basic ecology (eating even the worst plants) • Metabolism (be big) • Social organization (center on females) • Specifics on Asian elephants (including conservation) • Conservation of African elephants
  • 3. Ancestry and Evolution • Elephants should probably be considered part of the Afrotheria. Closest living relatives are seacows and hyraxes (see next slide). • Earliest proboscideans were tapir-like. • Evolutionary trends were deepening the teeth, shortening skull, lengthening trunk and legs. • Elephas & Mammuthus evolved in Africa; they were most modern elephants, invading Eurasia, North America and finally South America. • Loxodonta, more primitive, survived in Africa.
  • 4. They may not look like elephants, but… • An ancient branch of the Afrotheria evolved to exploit “low- quality” vegetation. • One “twig” of the branch became aquatic (seacows, upper left). • Another “twig” invaded xeric habitats (hyraxes; upper right; once some types were much bigger). • The third “twig” exploited intermediate habitats and became elephants.
  • 5. • Note the complexity of the Proboscidean tree. • Many taxonomists would show Mammuthus branching even later from Elephas. • Note that Mammut, Mammuthus, and Stegodon survived until relatively recent times. 1 1 2 New dates: 1 7.6MYBP 2 6.7MYBP
  • 6. Range and status today • Loxodonta: Once pan-African, now intra-tropical. – In plains and savannas, African elephants are now largely restricted to hunting preserves and national parks. – In thick forest, status less well known (but may be common). • Elephas: Once widely distributed from India throughout continental S.E. Asia and into southern China. Now very rare. – Working elephants in Myanmar; tourist elephants elsewhere. – Wild elephants in Indian national parks– and a few are widely scattered in some other national parks. • Almost everywhere they occur, elephants are often considered more valuable (or less trouble) dead than alive. Nowadays, people have the equipment to make ‘em that way.
  • 7.
  • 8. Dimensions of Elephants African elephant: Shoulder height: XX: 2.4-3.4m XY: 3.0-4.0m Mass: XX: 2400-3500kg XY: 4000-6300kg Asian Elephant: Shoulder ht: 2.5-3.0m Mass: 3500-5000kg
  • 9. Elephant legs are graviportal. • Bones are large and “stacked.” • Elephant walks on 5 toes & heel pad. • Elephants move long distances– for food, for water, for sex, maybe for fun. • Elephants don’t run: – Typical elephant walk is like brisk human walk. – Fastest walk is like top human sprint.
  • 10. Evolutionary elongation of the trunk • Apparent paradox: – Short trunk is useless to tall grazer – Evolving structure must be useful at all stages. • Ancient elephants: relatively short legs & trunk that reached ground. • Intermediate elephants: longer legs, longer skull, longer jaws, longer trunk– that reached ground. • …then trunk stays on the ground as skull and jaw shortened. • But The conventional history of elephant evolution: Terrestrial ancestor of Afrotherian megavertebrates gives rise to elephants, seacows, and hyraxes. The trunk of elephant ancestor lengthens in accompaniment with lengthening legs.
  • 11. A Garrettian (= wild-ass, contrarian) trunk-centered hypothesis on elephant evolution • The structure of elephant lungs and thoracic cavity suggests adaptation for snorkeling. – Anatomical adaptations are numerous and profound. – These adaptations cannot easily be accounted for by use of the trunk for terrestrial drinking. • Did snorkeling adaptations occur early? – Identical structures exist in Asian and African elephants. • Early snorkeling adaptations would suggest that elephants evolved from aquatic animals. – The logical candidate would be some ancestor shared w/ seacows (conventional). – The question is, was that ancestor aquatic? – If so, the lengthening of the trunk might have preceded the lengthening of the legs, which would have occurred after an invasion of the land, contrary to the conventional wisdom.
  • 12. The snorkeling-elephant conundrum (Note: We’re talking about systemic circulation to parietal pleura; pulmonary circulation is protected by “Zone 2 Phenomenon.”)
  • 13. Anatomy suggests that snorkeling adaptations may have been fundamental. • The vulnerable pleural membranes are replaced by thick plates of dense connective tissue. • The “pleural cavity” itself is filled with loose connective tissue. • The diaphragm is much thicker than would be expected for an animal of elephant size. • All these adaptations (and others) are observable early in embryonic development. • But we’ve digressed long enough; back to the trunk Remember: The origin of these adaptations must be more than 7.6MYBP.
  • 14. Uses of the trunk • As a tool – Grazing & browsing – Manipulating objects – Moving water • As a sense organ – Touch – Smell • As a social-signaling organ – A trumpet that amplifies vocalizations – A bearer of visual signals – A touch-communicator Tusks are next 
  • 15. Evolution of tusks & skull • Tusks are second upper incisors. Tusks typically emerge in XY & XX African but only in XY Asian adults. • Tusks’ utility and social importance are enormous. • Evolutionary tendency for skull to shorten & tusks to lengthen. • The conservation significance of tusks & ivory…. • Now: Other teeth Remember: The trunk helps maintain contact with the ground as the legs lengthen.
  • 16. Cheek teeth • Shredding in living sps & mammoths; crush-grinding in mastodons. • 6 molarform teeth per jaw- quadrant • 1 functioning tooth per quadrant; loss in front; magazine replacement from rear (see next 2 slides). Elephant or mammoth Mastodon Not a member of the Elephantidae.
  • 17. Elephant teeth & their replacement To know about elephant teeth is to know about elephant demography.
  • 18. Schedule of Tooth Replacement Tooth M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 Ages of use, African 0-1 years 1-2 years 2-6 years 6-15 years 15-28 years 28-47 years Ages of use, Asian 0-1 years 1-6 years 6-8.5 years 8.5-22.5 years 22.5-40 years 40-70 years Note: African-elephant data are from wild animals; Asian-elephant data are from captive, working animals. Next, ecology
  • 19. Basic ecological strategy • Elephants grow very large, thereby decreasing surface-to-volume ratio. • This reduces per-kg thermoregulatory expenses and therefore the amount of calories needed per kg body mass. (See next slide for Kleiber Curve) • Vast variety of plants eaten (Kibale, Uganda: 227 of 255 known species) but most food is usually from few species. • Absorptive efficiency is low, and elephants meet minimal nutritional needs by eating large quantities of OK food or vast quantities of wretched food. • Elephants have the capacity to alter an environment– and the mobility to move into a new area.
  • 20. Elephant Metabolism (C is “caloric expenses”; M is “Mass”; α & M are fitted constants) • Some general principles (Kleiber Curve): • C = αMβ • β is always < 1 (0.75+/-) • Now figure expense/size C/M = (αM0.75)/M C/M = α/M0.25 • That is, expenses per kg decline with increases in body size. • That is, elephants’ main metabolic specialization is to be BIG. • Some elephant specifics: • “Small” stomach, large caecum. • Feeding per day: – 10-18 hours – 150-250kg (c. 5% mass) • Throughput time c. 11- 26 hours. • Defecation per day: 150- 250kg • Assimilation efficiency: – Elephant: 44% – Cow: 66%
  • 21. Social organization (Most data are from African elephants.) • A baby elephant is born into a matriarchy after 21- 22mo. gestation. It receives much education, and interbirth interval is typically 4-6 years. – For 1st 6months, baby is watched all the time. – Baby is weaned at 6-18 months (occasionally later). – Until it’s almost 10 years old, juvenile spends c. 50% of its time within 5m of its mother (closer in moments of danger). • XX’s stay in natal group, cementing relationships w/mothers, grandmas, sisters, aunts, XX cousins…. • Between ages 8-20yrs, XY’s think increasingly of sex & become such pests that XX’s run them out of herd. Thereafter they join bachelor society (next slide).
  • 22. The machismo of bachelor society • Young males entering elephant bachelor society learn their places– or else. • Size is the major factor in establishing dominance. • Mutsch temporarily over-rides other considerations. – Temporal glands drain, penis drips, testosterone levels soar. – Temper, temper…. • Skull structure cushions head- bashing (pneumatic skull). • Use of tusks is dangerous. • Biggest XY occasionally return to XX groups. • Now, back to the more important considerations of XX groups!
  • 23. Long-lasting female groups form the nucleus around which all elephant society is organized!
  • 24. Female groups & elephant commo • Oldest XX is matriarch – She knows the area & the elephants. – She outlives repro years (only elephants and people); why? • Interaction & commo holds group together – Lots of touching and signaling – Trunk-in-mouth greeting ceremony – Low-frequency sounds – Play builds tightest bonds among young XX cousins • Courtship can be dramatic – XX receptive for only a day or two (but she courts longer) – Many XY’s may follow a receptive XX, but in a typical elephant population, only a few become fathers.
  • 25. The sociology and physiology of (African) elephant ears: looking big and cooling off! • Elephant social processes are mediated by size. Threat or dominance position has ears extended. • Ears also serve as radiators. – Each is right triangle, 1.5mX2m; total surface is 6m2, or about 20% of total. – Mass of each ear is about 20kg, or < 1% of total. – Blood-flow through ears can be > 1000 liters/hr. Next: A little on the sociality of Asian elephants
  • 26. A few social specifics on Asian elephants • Lots like Loxodonta, but haven’t shared common ancestor for about 7.6MY (people-chimps separation is about 5MY.). • Are Asian XY’s more connected w/XX groups? • It’s reported that Asian XX’s may form communal nursery groups. (Is this true? If so, does this occur in African elephants too?).
  • 27. Uh, how do you tell an Asian elephant from an African elephant? • Well, if you’re in Africa…. • Otherwise, – African has larger ears. – Asian has convex spinal line; African has concave spinal line. – Two-lip trunk in African elephant; Asian elephant has single trunk-lip. – Asian elephant usually smaller. – African XX usually have emergent tusks. Even with these babies, can’t you tell which is which?
  • 28. A general note on S.E. Asian conservation • Although not particularly urban, S.E. Asia is the most crowded area in the world. • Intensive agriculture covers almost every available hectare of reasonably flat land. • Most vertebrate wildlife survives only in national parks, many of which are also under threat. • In 1975, Vietnam was thought to have many hundreds, perhaps thousands, of elephants. • Today population is probably < 100, in widely separated small groups. • Elephants interfere with local people.
  • 29. Conservation of African elephants • The subject is much more complex than most “experts” would like to admit! • Elephant demography makes harvest potentially damaging to elephant populations. • Prior to international ivory ban (enforced by 1989), different countries had experienced different results with their management plans. • Conservation decisions, which should have been made on a biological basis, were driven by largely political concerns. • The arrogance of the “developed” world was demonstrated yet again.
  • 30. Conservation? In January 2008 the Philadelphia Zoo announced that it would breed its African elephants to help with species-conservation. The zoo also announced the construction of a $27 million elephant exhibit. One baby might be produced by 2010. Meanwhile, RSA will start killing thousands of elephants in May 2008, and the per-capita income in Zimbabwe is < $1/day. For 2010, cut by 50% Elephant conservation: How does one act responsibly in a world of limited resources, inequitably distributed?
  • 31. The future of elephants • Elephants are not an evolutionary dead- end, not a taxon that has outlived its ecological capacity. • Elephants are smart, adaptable, modern– and can live almost anywhere on almost any plant food. • BUT more than any other large mammal, elephants are efficient competitors with people!