4.6 Article

Noninvasive stress and reproductive measures of social and ecological pressures in free-ranging African elephants

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 1134-1142

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1739.2001.0150041134.x

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The African elephant (Loxodonta africana) experienced a poaching-related 60% population decline between 1979 and 1988 that was inordinately concentrated on adults. This, coupled with political pressures to delist the elephant, has created a need for non invasive physiological measures that can quantify the longterm effects of past mortality patterns of this long-lived species, We collected fresh fecal samples from 16 female elephants in three different groups over 23 months at Tarangire National Park, Tanzania, and analyzed them for fecal progesterone and cortisol metabolites. Social and ecological measures were collected concurrently. Fecal progesterone metabolite measures corresponded significantly with stage of gestation, and appear to be able to confirm pregnancy in female elephants from as early as 3 months of gestation. We found that progesterone metabolite concentrations were significantly lower during the dry, season than during the wet season after controlling for stage of gestation. Fecal cortisol metabolite concentrations showed the opposite seasonal pattern, being significantly higher in the di), season and inversely correlated with rainfall across seasons, Fecal cortisol metabolite concentrations also increased with group size and were correlated positively with dominance rank in the largest group. Our results suggest that measures of progesterone and cortisol metabolites in feces provide indices of reproductive function and physiological stress that can quantify both natural and human disturbances in African elephants. These measures are ideally suited for monitoring the long-term effects of social disruption from poaching and a variety of other management concerns.

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