Study at the University of Turku finds that sociality is linked to stress in Asian elephants

An international team of scientists found that sociality is linked to stress in Asian elephants. For example, loneliness increased male elephants’ level of stress, whereas having babies present reduced the stress level in female elephants.

In a press release, the Finnish University of Turku says that social behaviors are common in group-living mammals. It is known that humans that have friends or other strong social bonds can experience benefits such as improved health, an increased life span, and lower disease risk. These relationships can be attributed to the underlying effects of lowered circulating glucocorticoid hormones, also called “stress hormones”.

But how is social behavior connected to stress in other species? Our understanding of its mechanisms in long-lived animals is largely based on studies in human and non-human primates. Asian elephants, one of the world’s largest terrestrial mammals, have a very intricate social life. 

– We investigated four different aspects of the social world of 95 Asian timber elephants living in their natural habitat in Myanmar. These elephants work in the timber industry, where they pull and push logs out of the forest. However, spending much of their time free in their natural habitat allows the timber elephants to express many of their natural behaviors, which is often not the case in fully captive systems, such as zoos. This is a unique research environment and population that allows us to study many elephants living in their natural environment, but at the same time have detailed information about their social lives, says Dr. Martin Seltmann from the Department of Biology at the University of Turku, the lead author of the study. 

Just as humans, lonely elephants seem more stressed 

Every elephant works together with an elephant handler, and this relationship can last a lifetime. Therefore, a handler knows very well about his elephant’s behaviors and can give detailed information on its social interactions with other elephants. 

From 2014 to 2018, the scientists asked the handlers if their elephants have friends or if they prefer to stay alone. Furthermore, the team assessed the size of the elephant workgroups as a measure of social group size, the number of males and females within the workgroup, and if there were baby elephants present in the group. In addition, the researchers also assessed the concentrations of stress hormones from the elephants’ fecal samples. 

– We found that male elephants show higher levels of stress when they have no friends and when they are in social groups with more males than females. Female elephants show lower levels of stress when babies are present in the social group. The size of the social group is not related to levels of stress hormones in males or females, says Martin Seltmann and professor Virpi Lummaa, co-author of the study. 

The team also expected that females would show signs of stress when being solitary because wild elephant females spend their lives with other female relatives. The researchers think that strong male social bonds might be more important in the semi-captive setting than in purely wild elephants. Compared to male elephants, solitary females might still be able to interact with other individuals without forming strong social bonds and so the lack of those bonds may not be perceived as stress.

The findings of this new study highlight the importance of sociality on individual physiological function among elephants, which may have broad implications for the benefits of social interactions among mammals. They can also help to develop applied methods towards maintaining and improving the welfare of captive social animals

 

About Gregers Møller

Editor-in-Chief • ScandAsia Publishing Co., Ltd. • Bangkok, Thailand

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