The Phnom Penh Post

Wild elephants only sleep two hours a night: study

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ELEPHANTS hardly ever sleep in the wild, getting around two hours of shut-eye per night and only in the wee hours of the morning, researcher­s said on Wednesday.

The findings in the journal PLOS ONE are based on two female wild African elephants – living in Botswana’s Chobe National Park – who appear to sleep the least of any known mammals to date.

Researcher­s fitted the elephants’ trunks with movement trackers, similar to personal fitness monitors, and their necks with GPS collars complete with gyroscopes, and followed their activities for 35 days.

“We reasoned that measuring the activity of the trunk, the most mobile and active appendage of the elephant, would be crucial, making the reasonable assumption that if the trunk is still for five minutes or more, the elephant is likely to be asleep,” said researcher Paul Manger, from the School of Anatomical Sciences at the University of the Witwatersr­and in South Africa.

They found that the elephants slept only two hours per day on average, usually sometime between 2am and 6am.

Researcher­s said factors such as temperatur­e and humidity were more likely than sunrise and sunset to influence when elephants went to sleep.

The duo of matriarchs could sleep either standing or lying down. They tended to lie down to sleep only every three or four days, and then for only about an hour. This pattern suggests that the deep sleep, known as REM or the rapid eye movement period of slumber, is not something elephants need to consolidat­e memories the way humans do.

It also means that elephants may not dream very much.

The elephants’ sleep patterns were also unaffected by the amount of activity they undertook during the day. They did not get more tired than usual after a long day’s travel, for instance.

“We observed on five occasions that the elephants went without sleep for up to 46 hours,” said the study, noting that sometimes the elephants travelled significan­t distances, perhaps to avoid predators, poachers, or bulls seeking to mate.

“They exhibited no form of sleep rebound following a night without sleep.”

 ?? CARL DE SOUZA/AFP ?? A herd of elephants walking in Amboseli National Park in Kenya last year.
CARL DE SOUZA/AFP A herd of elephants walking in Amboseli National Park in Kenya last year.
 ?? AFP LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/ ?? French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron gives a speech as he unveils his full program yesterday.
AFP LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E/ French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron gives a speech as he unveils his full program yesterday.

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