Oman Daily Observer

Older sisters better for elephants than brothers, research suggests

- — PA Media/dpa

YOUNG ELEPHANTS benefit from having older sisters more than older brothers, new research suggests. Researcher­s at universiti­es in Finland, Britain and Myanmar found that Asian elephant siblings influence younger offspring from early on through to later-life.

Being raised with older siblings strongly increased the calves’ long-term survival compared to not having a sibling.

The study of semi-captive Asian elephants in Myanmar also found that sisters had a bigger impact than older brothers.

Female elephants raised with older sisters had higher long-term survival and reproduced for the first time an average of two years earlier, compared to those with older brothers.

Reproducin­g at an earlier age is generally associated with more offspring over the course of an elephant’s lifetime, researcher­s say.

While male elephants raised with older sisters had lower survival but higher body weight, compared to those with older brothers.

According to the researcher­s, this seemingly detrimenta­l effect maybe explained by a live-fast, die young strategy, where the positive early increase in body mass could lead to survival costs later in life.

Dr Verane Berger, at the University of Turku in Finland — lead author of the study, said: “Our research confirms that sibling relationsh­ips shape individual lives, particular­ly in social species, such as the elephants, where cooperativ­e behaviours are essential to the developmen­t, survival and reproducti­ve potential of individual­s.”

The long-term consequenc­es from sibling effects are understudi­ed in long-lived animals, perhaps because the logistical challenges of field studies make it hard to investigat­e effects over an animal’s entire lifespan.

In this study, researcher­s were able to overcome this by studying a population of government-owned, semi-captive timber elephants in Myanmar, for which extensive life history records are kept.

During the day these animals are used as riding, transport and draft animals.

At night they live unsupervis­ed in forests and can interact and mate with both wild and tame elephants.

The calves are raised by their mothers until they are five when they are trained for work. The Myanmar Timber Enterprise (MTE) imposes regulation­s on the daily and annual workload of elephants.

For the study published in the Journal of Animal Ecology, researcher­s used a large, multi-generation­al data set of semi-captive Asian elephants to look at the influence the presence and the sex of elder siblings on the body mass, reproducti­on, sex, and survival of the next calf. The records included reproducti­ve and longevity informatio­n for 2,344 calves born between 1945 and 2018. Researcher­s say that as the study was correlatio­nal, the influence of external factors outside sibling effects, such as the quality of maternal care and elephants’ workload and management, cannot be excluded.

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