September 2009
Things in nature that make me believe in God
The deep emotional life of elephants
What parent doesn’t love to see the wonder in
the eyes of their children when they encounter an elephant for the first time
at the zoo, or see them performing tricks at a traveling circus? [Note: this is
not a moral commentary on the legitimate criticism of elephants in zoo’s or
circuses.] When a baby elephant is born, entire human communities celebrate the
birth as well as entire herds of elephants, but more on that later. It is truly
a delight to see a crowd of children twitching with joy when they see a baby
elephant for the first time. Just last week in my home of Portland, crowds of
children got to watch a one-year-old calf celebrate her birthday with a cake
made of brown bread, sweet potato frosting and a carrot for a candle.
If you
are sensitive (and lucky) enough to get near a mama elephant and her calf,
sometimes you can feel a deep rumbling along your spine. It is not really
audible to the ear. Between 14 and 35 hertz it is felt more than heard. This
rumbling, however, is deeply comforting to the baby calf and is one of the ways
that its mother stays in touch with it. Thunderstorms also send out sound waves
that a herd of elephants can sense. As the plant life returns and sends out
pollen, the elephants can smell it, even from 100 miles away. They will begin
walking towards it at a pace of 2 to 4 miles an hour and they the time they
arrive at the site of the rain, the plants are lush with growth. Since an
elephant has to eat nearly 300 pounds a day, the time can be perfect.
You see,
elephants aren’t lead by the fastest, strongest or most dominate male, like a
herd of horses, a pride of lions or a harem of llamas. Elephant herds are
instead, led by the oldest female, a grand matriarch of perhaps 60 years of
age, whose great memory is able to remember water sources for decades and to
correlate them to unique weather conditions and changes. During a drought this
might be a dried river bed that she visited 20 years before where water is only
a few digs of her tusks away. This database of knowledge is essential for
survival, because an elephant needs to drink 15 to 20 gallons of water a day.
The matriarch may know the landscape of around 600 square miles. She navigates,
using her proverbial great memory, by recognizing landforms.
The
grandmother elephant learned from her grandmothers who learned from her
grandmothers in a legacy that goes back for generations; walking the same
routes and wearing a path in the forest or plains know as ‘elephant’ roads. She
will lead the herd into caves where they lick the salt that has leached from
the rainwater onto the walls. When the grandmother elephant dies the next in
line typically assumes the role of matriarch – usually her sisters or her
oldest daughter. Sadly, over half of wild elephants die by age 15 from
diseases, poachers or predators.
Adolescent
male elephants, once they are weaned but not yet mature, will form ‘bull
bands’. Once they reach maturity, the male elephants will live solitary lives
as nomads.
Elephants
communicate in very complex and nuanced ways using facial expressions, tummy
rumbles, trunk calls, and ultra low infra-sounds. These rumbles, too low for
humans to hear, allows the animals to communicate with each other even when
they are a 1,000 yards apart. There are almost 30 different rumbles they use
including a greeting, a lost call, an ‘I’m ready to mate’, a suckle rumble, or
a ‘let’s move out’ alert. The more well-known trumpet sound comes from the
trunk which an elephant will use like a wind instrument.
Elephants
can also hear with their feet. The footsteps of another herd, even 30 miles
away, vibrates through the ground and is detected through the feet, the
vibration going up the leg bones into the skull where it is amplifies and
channeled into the highly refined ossicles of the middle ear. The listening
elephants will alternatively lift their feet, equivalent to us turning our
heads to listen.
Elephants
are highly social and touch using their tails, trunks, even the soles of their
feet to establish social bonds. With wrinkly but highly sensitive skin,
elephants love to slide against each other when taking mud baths. Mother
elephants constantly touch their calves; reaching with her tail to make sure
the calf is following, or snuggling with the calf when lying on her stomach or
reassuringly wrapping her trunk around it and pulling it close just to touch.
Observers
have also documented nearly 100 different positions of the body, head, ears
and/or trunk, each combination indicating something specific to other
elephants. An elephant’s sense of
smell is also highly developed. To follow a scent track, it will sweep it’s
trunk across the path like a metal detector. If it needs to smell over greater
distances, it will hold its trunk into the air and swivel it around like a
periscope. Much like the elephants personality, the trunk is also very strong
and very sensitive. It can be used to pick up a peanut, guided by the small
hairs at the tip, or can be used to pull trees out of the ground. The elephant
will suck water into its trunk and then spray it into it’s mouth or blow dust
on it’s back to ward off biting flies. It can be used to pull up grass from the
ground or leaves off of a tree.
Elephants
will gestate for 22 months before giving birth to a 260 pound baby.
Unceremoniously dropped to the ground, the calf quickly recovers and begins to
nurse. The herd of females will often circle the newborn and trumpet in
celebration (okay, that’s just a sweet piece of trivia). The mother will suckle
for around six years before the calf is finally weaned – of course, by that
time it is 2,200 pounds and mama is probably ready for a rest – only human
parents take longer to raise a child to maturity. During that time, the entire
herd helps in raising the calf, guarding it from danger, helping it across
obstacles, and nudging it along the trail.
This
intelligence, nurturing, loving aspect of elephants somehow inspires my soul,
and reminds me that God also clearly loves the elephants. Sometimes as humans,
we become so self-involved that we forget how the rich biodiversity of life on
earth reveals the wisdom and goodness of God. I hope next time I stand in front
of an elephant, I can hear it’s love rumble deep in my soul. Maybe, just maybe,
there is a yet understood rumble - a song of praise to God.