Elephants are able to spend substantial time working on problems. They are able to change their behavior radically to face new challenges, a hallmark of complex
intelligence.
Problem-solving experiments A 2010 experiment revealed that in order to reach food, "elephants can learn to coordinate with a partner in a task requiring two individuals to simultaneously pull two ends of the same rope to obtain a reward", putting them on an equal footing with chimpanzees in terms of their level of cooperative skills. A study by Dr. Naoko Irie of Tokyo University has shown that elephants demonstrate skills at arithmetic. The experiment "consist[ed] of dropping varying numbers of apples into two buckets in front of the [Ueno Zoo] elephants and then recording how often they could correctly choose the bucket holding the most fruit." When more than one apple was being dropped into the bucket, this meant that the elephants had to "keep running totals in their heads to keep track of the count." The results showed that "Seventy-four percent of the time, the animals correctly picked the fullest bucket. An African elephant named Ashya scored the highest with an amazing eighty-seven percent … Humans in this same contest managed a success rate of just sixty-seven percent." The study was also filmed to ensure its accuracy. A study on
Discovery News found that elephants, during an intelligence test employing food rewards, had found shortcuts that not even the experiment's researchers had thought of.
Adaptive behavior in the wild In the wild, elephants display clever methods of finding resources. Elephants have powerful olfactory senses and long memories, and when evaluating
foraging locations, respond more strongly to long‐term patterns of
productivity than to immediate forage conditions. In times of scarcity, they return to areas which have been reliable over many years rather than the last sites visited. They also favor travelling on dirt roads in the dry season, as easy walking terrain to conserve energy. Although it is common for herbivores to find
salt licks or to ingest inorganic matter for sodium, elephants in the
Mount Elgon National Park, Kenya, have learned to venture deep into
Kitum Cave to utilize its minerals in what has been described as 'quarrying' and 'salt mining'. Although the elephants clearly do not understand that they require salt in their diet, they show interest only in the
cation-rich
zeolite, tusking it into smaller edible fragments. This activity is performed in groups, and years of tusk marks indicate the knowledge of the cave has been passed down over generations.
Poaching has caused the elephants to alter their behavior and avoid the more widely known caves. == Applying the string-drawing task to elephants ==