Elephants in Angola, which
suffered decades of civil war, have been observed avoiding heavily-mined areas,
suggesting their trunks were warning them to stay away. (Image source:
worldbulletin.com)
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In the South African bush,
elephants are being trained in the art of "bio-detection" to see if
they can use their exceptional sense of smell to sniff out explosives,
landmines and poachers, according to World Bulletin.
Supported by the U.S.
Army Research Office, the project looks promising.
During a recent test run, a
17-year-old male elephant named Chishuru walked past a row of buckets. A swab
laced with TNT scent had been stapled to the bottom of one.
The report continues:
Sticking his trunk into each
bucket, Chishuru stopped and raised a front leg when he came across the one
with the swab. He got the bucket right each time.
And like a sniffer dog, he
was rewarded with a treat: marula, a fruit that elephants love.
"An elephant's nose is
amazing. Think about mammoths, which had to find food through the ice,"
said Sean Hensman, operator of Adventures with Elephants, the game ranch
180 km (110 miles) northwest of Johannesburg where the training is
being conducted.
The project has a number of
roots. Elephants in Angola, which suffered decades of civil war, have been
observed avoiding heavily-mined areas, suggesting their trunks were warning
them to stay away.
In Hensman's case, he said
his father was startled in the 1990s while watching a herd of elephants
in Zimbabwe to discover that a female member of the herd had tracked
him.
Inspired, his father trained
12 elephants for anti-poaching patrols in Zimbabwe but in 2002 the
family lost their three farms to President Robert Mugabe's land seizures
and came to South Africa.
U.S. army researchers, who
have been involved in the project for five years, say unlike in Hannibal's
day, elephants will not be staging a return to the theatre of combat.
"We could bring scents
from the field collected by unmanned robotic systems to the elephants for
evaluation," said Stephen Lee, chief scientist of the U.S. Army
Research Office.
And who has the better nose,
the dog or the elephant?
"In our work I don't
believe we have a firm conclusion. We would like to better quantify this,"
Lee said.
But the old adage about an
elephant never forgetting seems to have some basis in truth.
"Dogs require constant training while the
elephants seem to understand and remember the scent without the need for
constant training," Lee said.
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