Social behaviour The core of elephant society is the family unit, which mostly comprises several adult cows, their daughters, and their
prepubertal sons.
Iain Douglas-Hamilton, who observed African bush elephants for 4.5 years in
Lake Manyara National Park, coined the term 'kinship group' for two or more family units that have close ties. The family unit is led by a
matriarch who at times also leads the kinship group. Groups cooperate in locating food and water, in self-defense, and in caring for offspring (termed
allomothering). Aerial surveys in the late 1960s to early 1970s revealed an average group size of 6.3 individuals in Uganda's
Rwenzori National Park and 28.8 individuals in Chambura Game Reserve. In both sites, elephants aggregated during the wet season, whereas groups were smaller in the dry season. Young bulls gradually separate from the family unit when they are between 10 and 19 years old. They range alone for some time or form all-male groups. A 2020 study highlighted the importance of old bulls for the navigation and survival of herds and raised concerns over the removal of old bulls as "currently occur[ring] in both legal trophy hunting and illegal poaching".
Temperature regulation The African bush elephant has curved skin with bending cracks, which support thermoregulation by retaining water. These bending cracks contribute to an evaporative cooling process which helps to maintain body temperature via
homeothermy regardless of air temperature.
Diet , Namibia , Botswana The African bush elephant is
herbivorous. It is a mixed feeder, consuming both grasses as well as woody vegetation (
browse), with the proportions varying wildly depending on the habitat and time of year, ranging from almost exclusively grazing to near-total browsing. African bush elephants' consumption of woody plants, particularly their habit of uprooting trees, has the ability to alter the local environment, transforming woodlands into grasslands. African bush elephants also at times consume fruit and serve as
seed dispersers. Adults can consume up to of food per day. To supplement their diet with
minerals, they congregate at mineral-rich water holes,
termite mounds, and
mineral licks. Salt licks visited by elephants in the Kalahari contain high concentrations of water-soluble
sodium. Elephants drink of water daily, and seem to prefer sites where water and soil contain sodium. In
Kruger National Park and on the shore of
Lake Kariba, elephants were observed to ingest
wood ash, which also contains sodium.
Communication Africa bush elephants use their trunks for tactile communication. When greeting, a lower ranking individual will insert the tip of its trunk into its superior's mouth. Elephants will also stretch out their trunk toward an approaching individual they intend to greet. Mother elephants reassure their young with touches, embraces, and rubbings with the foot, while slapping disciplines them. During courtship, a couple will caress and intertwine with their trunks while playing, and fighting individuals wrestle with them. Elephant vocalisations are variations of rumbles, trumpets, squeals, and screams. Rumbles are mainly produced for long-distance communication and cover a broad range of frequencies which are mostly below what a human can hear. Infrasonic rumbles can travel vast distances and are important for attracting mates and scaring off rivals. Males in musth become more aggressive. They guard and mate with females in
estrus, who stay closer to bulls in musth than to non-musth bulls. Urinary
testosterone increases during musth. Bulls begin to experience musth by the age of 24 years. Periods of musth are short and sporadic in young bulls up to 35 years old, lasting a few days to weeks. Older bulls are in musth for 2–5 months every year. Musth occurs mainly during and following the rainy season when females are in oestrus. Bulls in musth often chase each other and are aggressive towards other bulls in musth. When old and high-ranking bulls in musth threaten and chase young musth bulls, either the latter leave the group or their musth ceases. Young bulls in musth killed (and raping some) 63 mostly endangered or rare
rhinoceros (of both sexes) in
Hluhluwe-Umfolozi Park and
Pilanesberg National Park in South Africa during the 1990s.
Reproduction Spermatogenesis starts when bulls are about 15 years old. However, males have not begun sexual cycles, not experiencing their first musth period until they are 25 or 30 years of age. Cows
ovulate for the first time at the age of 11 years. They are in estrus for 2–6 days. In captivity, cows have an
oestrous cycle lasting 14–15 weeks.
Foetal gonads enlarge during the second half of pregnancy. African bush elephants mate during the rainy season. Bulls in musth are more successful at obtaining
mating opportunities than those who are not. A cow may move away from bulls that attempt to test her estrous condition. If pursued by several bulls, she will run away. Once she chooses a mating partner, she will stay away from other bulls, which are threatened and chased away by the favoured bull. Competition between bulls sometimes overrides the cow's choice of mating partner. Cows in Amboseli National Park gave birth once in 5 years on average. Captive-born calves weigh between at birth and gain about weight per day. Cows
lactate for about 4.8 years. Calves exclusively suckle their mother's milk during the first three months. Thereafter, they start feeding independently and slowly increase the time spent feeding until they are two years old. During the first three years, male calves spend more time suckling and grow faster than female calves. After this period, cows reject male calves more frequently from nursing than female calves. The maximum lifespan of the African bush elephant is between 70 and 75 years. Its
generation length is 25 years.
Predators Adult elephants are considered invulnerable to predation. Adult elephants often chase off predators, especially
lions, by mobbing behaviour. Calves, usually under two years, are sometimes preyed on by lions and
spotted hyenas. Juveniles are usually well defended by protective adults though serious drought makes them vulnerable to lion predation. In Botswana's
Chobe National Park, lions attacked and fed on juvenile and subadult elephants during the drought when smaller prey species were scarce. Between 1993 and 1996, lions successfully attacked 74 elephants; 26 were older than nine, and one was a bull of over 15 years. Most were killed at night, and hunts occurred more often during
waning moon nights than during bright moon nights. In the same park, lions killed eight elephants in October 2005 that were aged between 1 and 11 years, two of them older than 8 years. Successful hunts took place after dark when prides exceeded 27 lions and herds were smaller than 5 elephants.
Pathogens Observations at
Etosha National Park indicate that African bush elephants die due to
anthrax foremost in November at the end of the dry season. Anthrax spores spread through the intestinal tracts of vultures, jackals and hyaenas that feed on the carcasses. Anthrax killed over 100 elephants in Botswana in 2019. It is thought that wild bush elephants can contract fatal
tuberculosis from humans. Infection of the vital organs by
Citrobacter freundii bacteria caused the death of an otherwise healthy bush elephant after capture and translocation.
Neurotoxins produced by the cyanobacteria caused calves and adult elephants to wander around confused, emaciated and in distress. The elephants collapsed when the toxin impaired their motor functions and their legs became paralysed. Poaching, intentional poisoning, and anthrax were excluded as potential causes. Elephants may also be host for a variety of parasites and bacteria such as
Pasteurella,
Salmonella,
Clostridium, coccidian,
nematode, and
trematode. The
elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV) is a member of the
Proboscivirus genus, a novel clade most closely related to the mammalian
betaherpesviruses. In benign infections found in some wild and captive African elephants, these viruses can affect either the skin or the pulmonary system.
Intelligence Both African and
Asian elephants have a very large and highly complex
neocortex, a trait also shared by
humans,
apes and certain
dolphin species. Elephants manifest a wide variety of behaviour, including those associated with
grief,
learning,
mimicry,
playing,
altruism,
tool use,
compassion,
cooperation,
self-awareness,
memory, and
communication. In a 2013 study, it was suggested that elephants may understand
pointing, the ability to
nonverbally communicate an object by extending a finger, or equivalent. The intelligence of elephants is described as being on a par with that of
cetaceans, and various primates. == Threats ==