How Elephants Grieve as One of the World’s Smartest Animals | My Modern Met


By Eva Baron on February 2, 2025

Photo: Ikiwaner (via Wikimedia Commons, GNU Free Documentation License)

Of the entire animal kingdom, perhaps elephants most mirror the human grieving process.

Many animals have been proven to express some form of grief. From Tanzania, Jane Goodall once recorded a young chimpanzee that died of grief following the death of his mother only weeks earlier. One study followed a beluga whale that carried her deceased calf for almost a full week, while another found lemurs giving “lost” calls in the presence of a killed family member. Out of all these, however, perhaps elephants resemble a human’s mourning patterns most closely.

Elephants are often considered one of the world’s smartest animals, so it naturally follows that they also experience such complex emotions and sensations as grief. They have been documented stroking the bones of the deceased, guarding carcasses, burying dead calves, and even crying. Though ignoring the remains or bones of other species, elephants almost always react to those of their own.

One poignant example of this is the death of Eleanor, the matriarch of a Kenyan elephant family called the First Ladies. Researchers noted that she was bruised, dragging her trunk along the ground, and, soon after, she collapsed. Grace, a matriarch from another family, then approached Eleanor, attempting to nudge her back on her feet. Eleanor once again thudded to the ground, and Grace became incredibly agitated, vocalizing, pushing, and refusing to leave her.

When Eleanor died the next day, another female named Maui attended to the body, rocking over and prodding at it. For a whole week, elephants from five different families visited Eleanor’s corpse.

Another account details how a researcher once hid a speaker in a thicket. The device played a recording of an elephant who had recently passed, which caused its family members to call out in distress. In vain, they attempted to search for the dead elephant, and its daughter called for days afterward. The experiment was never repeated by the researcher again. […]

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About agogo22

Director of Manchester School of Samba at http://www.sambaman.org.uk
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