April 28, 2009 -- For a few brief weeks each spring, nourishing rains sprinkle the Samburu region of northern Kenya. It is the wet season, when the land turns verdant and elephants roam the savanna, feasting on tender, newborn grasses. Known for their adaptability, elephants will subsist on whatever vegetation they can find, in wet season or dry. But a new study has tracked the giant herbivores' diets, analyzing carbon, nitrogen and hydrogen isotopes in their tail hairs. The animals' bodies are tuned for the rush of nutrition, the study shows, relying on it to provide the energy needed to reproduce. Now changes in regional climate and cattle grazing practices could threaten that delicate balance. Thure Cerling of the University of Utah and a team of researchers used Global Positioning System (GPS) collars to track movements of "the Royals," a family of elephants living in and around the Samburu and Buffalo Springs Natural Reserves in Kenya. The area is home to some 800 elephants, thanks to local rivers that provide a permanent source of water and vegetation. Related Content:
Carbon locked away in trees and grasses has different isotopic signatures, and the team found that the hairs on the animals' tails preserved a detailed record of what they had eaten over the six-year period. When water was scarce most of the year, the animals ate mostly leaves from trees and shrubs. About two to three weeks after the rains began, though, the elephants shifted their diet, consuming as much as half of the 200 pounds or so of daily vegetation intake in the form of grass, whose protein content is at its peak at this time. "When it starts to get green, they don't switch," Cerling said. "Then after two to three weeks they do. The grass has to get long enough for them to twirl it around their trunks, like spaghetti on your fork." On average, the elephants conceived three weeks after the height of their grassy feasts, setting in motion a 22-month-long gestation period that culminates in newborns arriving just as the wet season begins two years later. Get More NewsSpiders, Scorpions Among World's Oldest CreaturesMany creepy crawlies have been on Earth much longer than previously believed.Blood-Sucking Vampire Bats Sing DuetsWhite-winged vampire bats "harmonize" with separated roost mates.Oldest Hebrew Writing Possibly FoundAncient inscriptions on a 3,000-year-old pottery shard could make history.Rare, Prehistoric-Age Reptile Found in N.Z.A tuatara has been spotted on the New Zealand mainland for the first time in 200 years.Iceman Has No Living RelativesOetzi, the 5,300 year-old frozen mummy, left no living genetic legacy.SLIDE SHOW: Landscapes of TerrorWhat makes a place feel scary? There are scientific explanations.It's Official: People Are Warming the PolesHumans are conclusively to blame for polar warming, say scientists.Eight-Armed Animal Preceded DinosaursWhat may be one of Earth's first animals was no bigger than a coaster and had eight arms.Phoenicians Live on in People's GenesOne in 17 Mediterranean men may be descended from ancient Phoenicians.Pesticides, Fertilizers Linked to Frog DeclineA pesticide is found to promote parasites among amphibians.Hubble Telescope Taking Photos AgainThe Hubble Space Telescope is once again snapping stunning photos of the universe.Andean Mummy Hairs Show Hallucinogen UseScientists find direct evidence of hallucinogenic drug use among ancient Andeans.Opals on Mars Reveal Planet's Long Wet PastOpals found on Mars suggest the planet has been wet for much longer. |
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