How Do Elephants Say Hello? Reunions Lead to Ear Flapping, Rumbling and Trunk Swinging in Greeting
New research explores how African savannah elephants use vocalizations, gestures and secretions when they meet up with companions
Sarah Kuta
Daily Correspondent
May 14, 2024
Elephants use different greetings depending on whether the other animal is looking at them. Vesta Eleuteri
When humans meet up with a companion they havent seen for a while, they may wave, shake hands or hug while saying something like, Hey, how are you?
Now, new research suggests African savannah elephants do the same. These massive mammals greet each other with a mix of gestures and soundsby flapping their ears, making rumbling noises, waggling their tails and reaching out their trunks, scientists reported last week in the journal Communications Biology.
Elephants are highly intelligent, social creatures that live in fission-fusion societies, meaning they regularly split upthen later reuniteas they roam around their environment.
When elephants meet again after spending time apart, they appear to greet each other. However, researchers werent sure whether the animals were communicating intentionally. They were also curious about how elephants use gestures and vocalizations in combination, a concept known as multimodal communication.
This is a first step to understanding the ways elephants communicate with vision and touch, says study lead author Vesta Eleuteri, an animal behaviorist at the University of Vienna, to ABC News Julia Jacobo. There had been descriptions of them using different body movements, but we didnt really know whether these were actually communicative.
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-do-elephants-say-hello-reunions-lead-to-ear-flapping-rumbling-and-trunk-swinging-in-greeting-180984357/