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African elephants in Kenya's Samburu National Reserve.
Note the adult elephant's tail hair. University of Utah
geochemist Thure Cerling analyzed chemical isotopes in
elephant tail hair to help track the diet and movements
of the giant creatures, which have international status
as endangered animals.
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Credit: George Wittemyer
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Jan. 2, 2006– By analyzing chemicals in tail hair from
elephants that wore radio collars, researchers tracked the diet
and movements of elephants in Kenya – a method aimed at
reducing human-elephant conflicts and determining where to establish
sanctuaries to protect the endangered creatures.
“This is a new method to understand elephant behavior and
help ensure their survival,” says geochemist Thure Cerling,
the study’s principal author and a distinguished professor
of geology-geophysics and biology at the University of Utah.
The findings are being published in the Jan. 3-6, 2006, online
edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, and in the journal’s Jan. 10 print issue.
The study involved analysis of “stable isotopes” of
carbon and nitrogen in African elephants’ tail hair to determine
what and where they ate as they also were tracked with Global
Positioning System (GPS) collars. Stable isotopes previously have
been used to track sources of counterfeit currency, illicit drugs,
explosives and bacteria like anthrax.
Among the elephants tracked in the study was a bull named Lewis,
who ate lowland grasses in a sanctuary during rainy times, then
trekked 25 miles to the mountains, where he ate shrubs and trees
by day and raided farmers’ corn fields at night. He was
shot after the study was completed, possibly by a farmer.
“One big question is how can we secure a future for elephants
when we know that the areas set aside for their protection are
too small,” says study co-author and zoologist Iain Douglas-Hamilton,
founder, president and chief executive officer of the Save the
Elephants Foundation in Nairobi, Kenya.
Elephants are endangered internationally, but “their actual
status varies from local abundance in parts of southern Africa
and in some protected areas elsewhere, to critically endangered
in vast regions of central Africa,” says Douglas-Hamilton,
who helped bring about a global ivory trade ban after chronicling
the massacre of elephants in the 1980s.
“Since they need space to roam and since the human population
is increasing within elephant range, there is inevitable conflict,”
he adds. “Tracking an elephant's diet through stable isotopes
defines essential elephant dietary needs and can help inform land
use planning. … The fine information from the isotopes and
actual elephant tracking can help us define the critical minimum
space needed by elephants and other animals.”
Cerling and Douglas-Hamilton conducted the study with George Wittemyer,
a doctoral student at the University of California, Berkeley;
biologist Fritz Vollrath and doctoral student Henrik Rasmussen
at Oxford University; and two University of Utah undergraduate
lab workers: Claire Cerling, who is Cerling’s daughter,
and Todd Robinson.
How Isotopes in Elephant Tail Hair Reveal Climate and
Diet
Isotopes are different weights or forms an element. Stable isotopes
are those that do not decay radioactively. Because environmental
factors affects the proportions of various isotopes of hydrogen,
oxygen, carbon and nitrogen in animals, plants, soil and air,
stable isotope analysis has been used as a way to learn how ecosystems
work.
In recent years, University of Utah biologist James Ehleringer
pioneered analysis of stable isotopes to study “the ecology
of terrorism,” using the method to determine where drugs
were grown or processed, where counterfeit currency was produced,
where explosives were manufactured and even where bacteria similar
to anthrax were cultured.
Cerling, meanwhile, has used the method to learn about prehistoric
climates and environments. He has estimated how carbon dioxide
levels in Earth’s atmosphere varied over time millions of
years ago by analyzing the proportions of different carbon and
oxygen isotopes in prehistoric soils and animal teeth.
In the new study, Cerling and colleagues analyzed hair in the
tails of African elephants in Samburu National Reserve in Kenya.
The foot-long hairs were collected when the elephants were briefly
immobilized with drug-laden dart guns so they could be fitted
with GPS radio-tracking collars or new batteries for the collars.
Save the Elephants has placed 80 GPS collars in elephants in the
past decade to identify elephant habitats and their travel corridors.
Goals include preserving habitats, protecting corridors and minimizing
conflicts with humans.
In the new study, Cerling first calculated the rate of tail hair
growth for the seven elephants studied. Recent hair growth contains
isotopic clues to the elephant’s recent diet and environmental
conditions; isotopes in older hair farther down the tail represent
progressively older diet and environmental conditions:
-- Ratios of rare nitrogen-15 to common nitrogen-14 in tail hair
revealed information about diet and environment. Plants in dry
areas like Samburu have high ratios, while plants in wetter areas
– such as forests on Mount Kenya – have lower ratios.
-- Ratios of rare carbon-13 to common carbon-12 also reveal information
about diet because plants fall into two groups with two methods
of photosynthesis. Plants with so-called C3 photosynthesis include
trees and shrubs, and have a relatively low carbon-13-to-carbon-12
ratio. Plants with C4 photosynthesis include warm season tropical
grasses, corn, millet and crabgrass, and have a fairly high ratio
of carbon-13 to carbon-12.
So a section of elephant tail hair with a low carbon-13-to-carbon-12
ratio indicates the elephant was eating trees and shrubs at the
time that section of hair grew, while a high ratio indicates they
ate tropical grasses – or perhaps a crop like corn.
The Findings: You (Elephants) Are What You Eat
The scientists studied tail hair isotopes and-or GPS tracking
records for seven elephants during 2000 through July 2002.
Isotopes in the tail hair of six elephants had high ratios of
nitrogen-15 to nitrogen-14, indicating they spent their time in
the arid lowlands of Samburu. Most of the time, they had low ratios
of carbon-13 to carbon-12, indicating they ate trees and shrubs.
But during the rainy season – as indicated by satellite
photos – they had higher ratios of carbon-13 to carbon-12
because they ate grasses that flourished in the wet weather.
“When it gets green, they begin to eat grass,” Cerling
says. “When it’s not, they eat trees and shrubs.”
The seventh elephant – the bull named Lewis – was
different. Cerling had isotope data from Lewis’ tail hair
from 2000 through February 2002, when the hair was removed at
the same time a GPS radio collar was placed on Lewis. The collar
tracked Lewis from February to July 2002, when it failed. An assumption
was made that Lewis’s behavior when GPS tracked him was
similar to when he was “tracked” by his tail hair
chemistry.
The collar showed that Lewis spent rainy seasons in lowland Samburu,
but then trekked 25 miles cross country to the Imenti Forest,
some 6,500 feet in elevation on Mount Kenya. While in the forest,
he made nighttime raids into subsistence farms.
The collar showed Lewis made three trips between mountain forest
and arid lowlands between February and July 2002, with each 25-mile
trek taking only 15 hours.
Such behavior is called “streaking” because the elephants
“are essentially going as fast as they can,” Cerling
says. “They spend their time in one area, and suddenly make
this dash across the country and spend a long time in another
area. Fewer and fewer elephants do this because the distance between
safe areas is getting greater and there are more fences, more
guns and more people.”
Lewis’ tail hairs showed he had higher nitrogen-15-to-nitrogen-14
ratios during times he was in the arid Samburu preserve, which
produces the “dry” nitrogen isotope signature even
during the rainy season. Lewis also had higher ratios of carbon-13
to carbon-12, indicating he went to Samburu during rainy times
to eat grass.
At other times, the nitrogen isotope ratio was lower in Lewis’
tail hair, indicating he spent the dry season in the mountains,
where he normally ate trees and shrubs. But elevated carbon isotope
ratios from mid-June to mid-August 2001 showed Lewis was eating
C4 plants too – probably maize during nighttime crop raids.
Cerling says it is “important to quantify how much of elephants’
diet comes from crops. It’s going to help resolve elephant-human
conflict by quantifying the crop damage done by elephants. …
Areas open to elephants are getting smaller and smaller, so we
need to know how important different foods are to their diets
in different areas.”
Lewis’ Deadly Final Trek
Douglas-Hamilton says that when elephants move, it is for “sustenance,
security or sex.” Lewis’ motivation was not security
since he crossed dangerous human-occupied territory. But by “streaking”
to the mountains during the dry season, Lewis was able to eat
corn while the Samburu elephants browsed on trees and shrubs.
“Diet is very important for bull elephants,” says
Douglas-Hamilton. “If they are to succeed in sexual contests
for females, they need high-quality food to build up their strength,
hence the reason for high-risk crop raiding.”
“It is a high-risk, high-gain strategy, and in our elephant's
case it did not pay off. Shortly after the research was done,
Lewis suffered multiple gunshots, very likely a result of crop
raiding. He died in the Samburu reserve a year after the research
was done.”
Douglas-Hamilton says the study shows that “tracking stable
isotopes in an elephant's diet – when combined with actual
tracking of movements using high-tech remote sensing – provides
a powerful new tool for conservationists. It allows us to understand
possible elephant motivation and, from this, to see how management
plans can be focused on understanding their basic needs for space.”
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