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>From BBC news service:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6100430.stm

 

Hari OM

Shyam

 

 

 

Elephants' jumbo mirror ability

Elephant in front of test mirror (Joshua Plotnik,

Frans de Waal, and Diana Reiss)

The study used very large mirrors

Elephants can recognise their own reflection, showing

self-awareness seen before only in humans, great apes

and bottlenose dolphins, scientists say.

 

US researchers made the discovery by studying the

behaviour of Asian elephants in front of a tall

mirror.

 

One of the animals repeatedly touched a white cross

painted on her forehead - a classic test used to

assess mirror self-recognition in children and apes.

 

The study is reported in Proceedings of the National

Academy of Sciences.

 

"We see highly complex behaviours such as self

awareness and self-other distinction in intelligent

animals with well-established social systems," said

Joshua Plotnik, from the Yerkes National Primate

Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.

 

"The social complexity of the elephant, its well-known

altruistic behaviour and, of course, its huge brain,

made the elephant a logical candidate species for

testing in front of a mirror."

 

'X' marks the spot

 

Many animals will respond to a mirror but very few

show any evidence that they recognise themselves in

the reflection.

 

Canines, for example, will react to the "other dog"

and will even look behind the mirror to try to find

it.

 

'Happy' the elephant with X-shaped mark on her head

(PNAS)

'Happy' passed the 'X' test

 

The Asian elephants in this study also displayed this

type of behaviour when standing in front of a

2.5m-by-2.5m mirror - they inspected the rear and

brought food close to the mirror for consumption.

 

But one of the elephants, called "Happy", went to the

next level: she began repeatedly touching a painted

"X" on her head with her trunk.

 

The mark could only be seen in the mirror, and the

elephant ignored another mark made with colourless

paint that was also on her forehead to ensure she was

not merely reacting to a smell or feeling.

 

While only one elephant passed the mark-touching test,

the researchers note that fewer than half of

chimpanzees tested typically pass this test.

 

A clever club

 

"Elephants have been tested in front of mirrors before

but previous studies used relatively small mirrors

kept out of the elephants' reach," said Plotnik.

 

"This study is the first to test the animals in front

of a huge mirror they could touch, rub against and try

to look behind."

 

"Happy" the elephant touches X-shaped mark on her head

(PNAS)

Few animals show self-awareness

 

Co-researcher Frans de Waal said: "As a result of this

study, the elephant now joins a cognitive elite among

animals commensurate with its well-known complex

social life and high level of intelligence.

 

"Although elephants are far more distantly related to

us than the great apes, they seem to have evolved

similar social and cognitive capacities, making

complex social systems and intelligence part of this

picture.

 

"These parallels between humans and elephants suggest

a convergent cognitive evolution possibly related to

complex sociality and cooperation."

 

The study, conducted with the Wildlife Conservation

Society (WCS), used elephants housed at the Bronx Zoo

in New York.

 

 

 

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