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How elephants plan their journeys: New study reveals energy-saving strategies

A new study has revealed that African Elephants have an extraordinary ability to meet their colossal food requirements as efficiently as possible. Data from over 150 elephants demonstrated that these giants plan their journeys based on energy costs and resource availability. The findings – published today (26 March) in the Journal of Animal Ecology– could provide crucial information to help protect these iconic animals and their habitats.

Being an elephant is no easy task. As massive herbivores weighing several tons, they must consume vast amounts of low-calorie vegetation every day. However, their sheer size means that moving around to find food costs significant physical effort. Literally every step matters—especially in the vast, often harsh landscapes they traverse.

Understanding how elephants move through the landscape is essential for designing effective conservation strategies, particularly as habitat fragmentation and human activities continue to threaten populations. But up to now, key drivers behind elephant movements have been unclear.



The new study, led by researchers from the University of Oxford, the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), and Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, used GPS tracking data from 157 African elephants collected over a 22-year period (1998–2020) in Northern Kenya. Data was collected by Save the Elephants, a UK-registered, Kenya-based research and conservation charity.

Key findings:


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According to the researchers, the elephants’ behaviour is comparable to birds appearing to deliberately use favourable thermal uplifts to reduce the energetic costs of flying.

To analyse the elephant tracking data the research team employed an innovative modelling method called ENERSCAPE, which estimates the energy costs of movement based on body mass and terrain slope. By integrating these estimates with satellite data on vegetation productivity and water availability, they built detailed energy landscapes that help explain elephants’ movement decisions.

A statistical approach called step-selection functions was used to assess how the elephants chose their paths. This technique compares the locations that elephants actually visited with other nearby areas they could have chosen but did not. By doing so, the researchers identified which environmental factors play a role in elephants’ movement decisions and habitat selection.

These findings have direct applications for wildlife conservation, and could help guide the design of protected areas and migration corridors to reduce conflict with humans. The study also suggests that conservation strategies should account for individual differences in habitat preferences, particularly concerning water access.

The results could also help predict how elephant movements may respond to climate change, which affects both the energy costs of moving, and the availability of food and water.

In the future, the researchers aim to refine energy landscape models by incorporating additional factors such as seasonal changes, human disturbances, and the impact of climate change on elephant movements.

Co-author Professor Fritz Vollrath (University of Oxford) said: “While more detailed research is needed to fully understand how an elephant uses its habitat, this study identifies a central decision-making factor for travelling elephants: save energy whenever possible.”

Lead researcher Dr Emilio Berti (German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research and Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena) added: “These new results have important implications for assessing and planning conservation and restoration measures, such as dispersal corridors, by explicitly accounting for the energy costs of moving.”

IMAGE CREDIT: Jane Wynyard (Save The Elephants).


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