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  AUDIO & VIDEO : Multimedia

Elephants Slaughtered for their TusksAudio
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Stop Elephant Poaching Audio
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Poaching WarsITV :Tom Hardy
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Many Animal Populations Facing ThreatsAudio
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Scientists Use DNA to Trace Illegal ElephantVOA : Audio
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Fueling World Ivory Trade Spells New Threat to Africa's Elephant PopulationAudio
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Elephants mobbing a predator and calling for reinforcementsAudio
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An eight year old elephants trumpets at a Maasai dogAudio
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An adult male elephants trumpets at lionsAudio
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Elephant Poaching.Lagu Terbaru Tyler Hicks
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Elephants Slaughtered for their Tusks

Stop Elephant Poaching
 

Poaching Wars - ITV with Tom Hardy

Many Animal Populations Facing Threats

Scientists Use DNA to Trace Illegal Elephant - VOA.

Fueling World Ivory Trade Spells New Threat

Elephants mobbing a predator and calling for reinforcements

An eight year old elephants trumpets at a Maasai dog

An adult male elephants trumpets at lions

Elephants Poaching with Lagu Terbaru & Tyler Hicks

Elephant Memory : A study on elephant memory shows that having a strong memory helps elephants survive in the wild.

 

Disturbed Elephants :Evidence that elephants can be haunted by traumatic experiences for decades puts a darker spin on the old adage, "An elephant never forgets."

ARKive - Discover the world's most endangered species

 

ARKive - the ultimate multimedia guide to the world's endangered species. Includes endangered species videos, photos, facts & education resources.

Asian elephant

(Elephas maximus)

 

Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) are smaller than their African savannah relatives (Loxodonta africana) and have many other physical…

 

More about the asian elephant »

More about Asian Elephants
Elephas maximus photos
Elepgas maximus Videos

African elephant

(Loxodonta africana)

 

Perhaps one of the world’s most emotive and iconic animals, the African elephant (Loxodonta africana) is the largest living terrestrial…

 

More about the african elephant »

More about african elephant
Loxodonta Africana Photos
Loxodonta Africana Videos

Vocal learning in elephants: neural bases and adaptive context - NCBI

Abstract

In the last decade clear evidence has accumulated that elephants are capable of vocal production learning. Examples of vocal imitation are documented in African (Loxodonta africana) and Asian (Elephas maximus) elephants, but little is known about the function of vocal learning within the natural communication systems of either species. We are also just starting to identify the neural basis of elephant vocalizations. The African elephant diencephalon and brainstem possess specializations related to aspects of neural information processing in the motor system (affecting the timing and learning of trunk movements) and the auditory and vocalization system. Comparative interdisciplinary (from behavioral to neuroanatomical) studies are strongly warranted to increase our understanding of both vocal learning and vocal behavior in elephants.

Current Opinion in Neurobiology 2014, 28:101–107

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4181794/

 

Audio S1 - Trunk squelching sound prodiced by a juvenile male African elephantAudio NCBI
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Voice learning in elephants (1)

Audio S2 - Creaking sound produced by an adult female African elephantAudio NCBI
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Audio S3 - Sound imitation ‘Nuo’Audio NCBI
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Voice learning in elephants (3)

Voice learning in elephants (2)

Audio S4 - Sound imitation 'Annyong'Audio NCBI
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Voice learning in elephants (4)

An Asian Elephant Imitates Human Speech NCBI

Abstract


Vocal imitation has convergently evolved in many species, allowing learning and cultural transmission of complex, conspecific sounds, as in birdsong [1, 2]. Scattered instances also exist of vocal imitation across species, including mockingbirds imitating other species or parrots and mynahs producing human speech [3, 4]. Here, we document a male Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) that imitates human speech, matching Korean formants and fundamental frequency in such detail that Korean native speakers can readily understand and transcribe the imitations. To create these very accurate imitations of speech formant frequencies, this elephant (named Koshik) places his trunk inside his mouth, modulating the shape of the vocal tract during controlled phonation. This represents a wholly novel method of vocal production and formant control in this or any other species. One hypothesized role for vocal imitation is to facilitate vocal recognition by heightening the similarity between related or socially affiliated individuals [1, 2]. The social circumstances under which Koshik’s speech imitations developed suggest that one function of vocal learning might be to cement social bonds and, in unusual cases, social bonds across species.
 

Part 1 : An Asian Elephant Imitates Human Speechncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Part II : An Asian Elephant Imitates Human Speech Unknown Artistncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Part III : An Asian Elephant Imitates Human Speechncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Part IV : An Asian Elephant Imitates Human Speechncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Vocal imitation (1)

Vocal imitation (2)

Vocal imitation (3)

Vocal imitation (4)

Elephants Sounds : Some African elephant call types.


Elephant rumbles are very low frequency calls and I originally saved individual calls at a low sample rate.

 Bark - Elephant call type

Cry - Elephant call Type

Grunt - Elephant call type

             Elephants can distinguish human voices by the language they speak, and tell the difference between men, women and children.

 

    Elephants are known to be highly intelligent animals, with a complex social and communication system. But new research by Dr. Karen McComb, a Professor of Animal Behaviour and Cognition at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England, had found that elephants can determine a lot about a human from the sound of a voice.

    The elephants studied in Kenya were exposed to recorded voices of members of both Maasai and Kamba tribes, speaking in their native language.The elephants responded dramatically to the male Maasai voice in particular, by taking up a defensive stance, protecting the young and moving away together. Historically, Maasai men have speared elephants to keep them away from their cattle. The more agricultural Kamba do not pose a threat to the elephants. The study shows that even if elephants have not had a direct encounter with the Maasai, the danger is still recognized by the sound of their voice. 

 

Related Links

 

 

Elephants Never Forget Human Voices.

THE ELEPHANT LISTENING PROJECT

 

 

  • Forest Elephants

  • Elephant Ecology

  • Elephant Society

  • Elephant Families

  • Elephant Babies

 

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