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Applying GPS and Accelerometers to the Study of African Savanna (Loxodonta africana) and Asian Elephant (Elephas maximus) Welfare in Zoos

机译:将Gps和加速度计应用于非洲大草原(Loxodonta africana)和亚洲大象(Elephas maximus)在动物园中的福利研究

摘要

African savanna elephants (Loxodonta africana) and Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) are a focus of welfare research in zoos due to their high intelligence, complex social structure, and sheer size. Due to these challenges, some argue that zoos are inherently incapable of providing appropriate care for elephants, while others believe that zoos can fulfill the needs of these species with improved husbandry. There is a general consensus from both within and outside of zoos, however, that zoos must improve their elephant programs or cease exhibiting these animals altogether. Now more than ever, applied research on zoo elephant welfare is needed to provide context for this debate.Researchers are interested in how far zoo elephants walk due to the potential health and welfare benefits of walking in these highly mobile species. Zoo researchers recently adopted GPS technology to study elephant walking, and preliminary evidence suggests that African elephants in large zoo exhibits walk distances that correspond with wild elephants under non-extreme conditions. However, data are limited from Asian elephants and from elephants in more typically-sized exhibits. In Chapter Two, I discuss important methodological considerations of utilizing GPS in a zoo environment, including an introduction to the technology, sources of error and mitigation, methods to improve GPS performance, and possible effects of GPS device attachment on animal behavior. This review shows GPS performance is adequate for tracking zoo elephant walking when proper methodological techniques are applied, and should serve as a useful reference for zoo researchers considering using GPS.In Chapter Three, I used GPS anklets to measure outdoor daily walking distance in 56 adult female African (n = 33) and Asian (n = 23) elephants housed in 30 zoos. I collected 259 days of data and found that elephants walked an average of 5.34 km/day with no significant difference between species. Multivariate regression models predicted that elephants with more dynamic feeding regimens (more diverse feeding types and frequencies; unscheduled feeding times) will walk more. Distance walked was also predicted to be higher in elephants that spend time in a greater number of different social groups. Distance walked was predicted to decline with age. Finally, I found a significant negative correlation between distance walked and nighttime space experience. The results of the analysis suggest that zoos that want to increase walking in their elephants need not rely solely on larger exhibits, but can increase walking by adding quality and complexity to exhibits. However, my results failed to establish a definitive link between walking distance and other validated measures of elephant welfare. Thus, the direct health and welfare benefits of walking in zoo elephants remain unresolved.Resting behaviors are an essential component of animal welfare, but have received little attention in zoological research. In Chapter Four, I used accelerometers in anklets to complete the first large-scale multi-species investigation of zoo elephant recumbence. I collected 344 days of data from 72 adult female African (n = 44) and Asian (n = 28) elephants at 40 zoos. I found that African elephants are recumbent an average of 2.14 hours/day, which is significantly less than Asian elephants at 3.22 hours/day. Multivariate regression models predicted that African elephant recumbence increases when they experience more space at night, and Asian elephant recumbence increases when they spend time housed alone. Both species showed a similar response to substrate, such that African elephants spending time on all-hard substrates are predicted to be recumbent less, while Asian elephants spending time on all-soft substrates are predicted to be recumbent more. The discovery that occasional non-recumbence is a common behavior in zoo elephants also introduces a new area of research that may have important animal welfare consequences. Finally, this study established that zoos should continue their efforts to replace hard substrate with soft substrate in order to provide zoo elephants with environments that facilitate recumbence.Overall, this work assessed walking and recumbence in zoo elephants, which will allow zoos to gauge the prevalence of these behaviors in their elephants as compared to the sub-population studied here. A variety of factors that are associated with these behaviors were also identified. With this information, zoos can prioritize modifications to their facilities and animal management programs to create an environment that encourages zoo elephants to express walking and recumbence behavior, should they choose to do so.This work is one component of the Elephant Welfare Project, the largest zoo animal welfare project ever undertaken, and is unprecedented in both scope and scale. The project was funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), an independent, U.S., federal, grant-making agency that supports libraries, museums, and zoos. At the time of this writing, the first manuscripts from this project are being submitted to academic journals. These papers will describe the prevalence and distribution of a variety of elephant behaviors and welfare indicators, serve as a benchmark for future elephant welfare studies, and aid in decision making with regard to best practices in elephant management.
机译:非洲大草原象(Loxodonta africana)和亚洲象(Elephas maximus)由于其高智能,复杂的社会结构和庞大的规模而成为动物园福利研究的重点。由于这些挑战,一些人认为动物园天生就无法为大象提供适当的照料,而另一些人则认为动物园可以通过改善饲养来满足这些物种的需求。动物园内部和外部都普遍达成共识,但是,动物园必须改善其大象计划或完全停止展示这些动物。现在比以往任何时候都需要对动物园象的福利进行应用研究,以为这场辩论提供背景。研究人员对动物园象的行走距离感兴趣,因为在这些高度活动的物种中行走可能带来健康和福利益处。动物园研究人员最近采用GPS技术来研究大象的行走,初步证据表明,大型动物园中的非洲大象在非极端条件下的行走距离与野生大象相对应。但是,数据仅限于亚洲象和更大尺寸展品中的象。在第二章中,我讨论了在动物园环境中使用GPS的重要方法论因素,包括技术介绍,错误和缓解的根源,改善GPS性能的方法以及GPS设备对动物行为的可能影响。这项审查表明,使用适当的方法学技术,GPS性能足以跟踪动物园的大象行​​走,并且应为考虑使用GPS的动物园研究人员提供有用的参考。在第三章中,我使用GPS脚链测量了56位成年人的户外每日行走距离在30个动物园中饲养的雌性非洲大象(n = 33)和亚洲大象(n = 23)。我收集了259天的数据,发现大象平均每天行走5.34公里,而物种之间没有显着差异。多元回归模型预测,采用动态饲喂方式(饲喂类型和频率更多;计划外的饲喂时间更多)的大象会走得更多。人们还预测,在更多数量的不同社会群体中花费时间的大象,步行距离会更高。预计步行距离会随着年龄的增长而下降。最后,我发现步行距离与夜间太空体验之间存在显着的负相关。分析结果表明,想要增加大象行走能力的动物园并不需要仅依靠较大的展览品,而是可以通过增加展览品的质量和复杂性来增加行走次数。但是,我的结果未能在步行距离与其他经过验证的大象福利度量标准之间建立明确的联系。因此,仍然没有解决在动物园里行走大象带来的直接健康和福利益处。休息行为是动物福利的重要组成部分,但在动物学研究中却很少受到关注。在第四章中,我使用脚链上的加速度计完成了对动物园大象卧倒的首次大规模多物种调查。我从40家动物园的72只成年雌性非洲大象(n = 44)和亚洲大象(n = 28)收集了344天的数据。我发现非洲大象的平均卧床时间为2.14小时/天,远低于亚洲大象的3.22小时/天。多元回归模型预测,非洲象在夜间有更多空间时,横卧会增加,而亚洲象在独居时会增加横卧。两种物种对底物的反应都相似,因此,预计非洲象在全硬底物上花费的时间较少,而亚洲象在全软底物上花费的时间预计更多。偶尔的不卧倒是动物园里的大象常见的行为这一发现也引入了一个新的研究领域,可能会对动物的福利产生重要影响。最后,这项研究确定了动物园应继续努力用软质基质代替硬质基质,以便为大象提供便利的卧卧环境。总体而言,这项工作评估了动物园大象的行走和卧卧度,这将使动物园能够评估其流行程度。与此处研究的亚种群相比,它们在大象中的这些行为。还确定了与这些行为相关的各种因素。借助这些信息,动物园可以优先考虑对其设施和动物管理计划的修改,以创造一个鼓励动物园大象选择走动和躺卧行为的环境。这项工作是大象福利项目的一个组成部分。动物园动物福利项目曾经进行过,规模和规模都前所未有。该项目由美国独立的联邦博物馆和图书馆服务研究所(IMLS)资助,是支持图书馆,博物馆和动物园的拨款机构。在撰写本文时,该项目的第一批手稿正在提交给学术期刊。这些论文将描述各种大象行为和福利指标的普遍性和分布情况,作为将来大象福利研究的基准,并帮助制定有关大象管理最佳实践的决策。

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    Holdgate Matthew Robert;

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