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Wild Asian elephants display unique puzzle solving skills

Posted on September 29, 2023

A study highlights individual variation in problem-solving abilities among wild Asian elephants. This insight into elephant cognition may hold significance for managing human-elephant conflicts in rapidly changing environments caused by habitat loss and agricultural encroachment.

Individual innovation is considered one sign of intelligence within species, and elephants are among the animals that researchers have long taken an interest in because of their sophisticated approach to problem solving. A newly published study in the journal Animal Behaviour details findings from a six-month-long study documenting the abilities of individual wild Asian elephants to access food by solving puzzles that unlocked storage boxes.

The researcher says that this is the first research study to show that individual wild elephants have different willingness and abilities to problem solve in order to get food. This is important knowledge, because how animals think and innovate may influence their ability to survive in environments that are rapidly changing due to human presence.

Conducted at the Salakpra Wildlife Sanctuary in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, the study used motion-activated cameras to observe 77 wild Asian elephants who approached and decided whether to attempt opening puzzle boxes with three differently configured compartments that contained highly aromatic jackfruit. Depending on the compartment with which the elephant interacted, the jackfruit could be accessed by pulling on a chain so the door opened toward the elephant, pushing the door so that it swung open into the box, or sliding the door open to the right. The elephants had to independently interact with the puzzle boxes to discover how the compartments could be opened.

A camera trap screenshot captured a bull elephant interacting with one of the puzzle boxes in the Salakpra Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand. The configuration of the puzzle box is a push door at the top, pull door in the middle, and a slide door at the bottom.
CREDIT: The Comparative Cognition for Conservation Lab, Dept of Psychology at Hunter College

Over time, 44 of the elephants who approached the puzzle boxes interacted with them, but there were individual differences in how innovative the elephants were. The researchers found that elephants who interacted with the puzzle boxes more frequently and with greater persistence were more successful in retrieving food from all three differently configured compartments. Overall, 11 elephants solved one compartment type and eight solved two compartment types. Five elephants solved all three types, and therefore were the most innovative.

Conflict involving humans and elephants is increasing due to loss of natural habitat and agricultural encroachment into what is left of it. Investigating innovation and problem solving in elephants can inform our understanding of wild elephant cognitive flexibility and its potential impact on conservation management and human-elephant conflict mitigation.

News Source: Eurekalert

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