Do elephants have a good memory?

Elephants are incredible creatures. The largest land mammals on earth, they show a wide range of behavioral and emotional patterns in their up-to-60-year lifespans. They grieve over the bodies of dead herd members, and can even recognize their own reflections in a mirror. And, of course, there’s that old saying: “Elephants never forget.” While it may be an exaggeration, there’s more truth to the adage than you might realize. 

Science has also proven that elephants have great memories. In 2007, researchers at the University of Saint Andrews in Scotland placed urine samples in front of female elephants at the Amboseli National Park in Kenya; according to Scientific American, the elephants “acted up” when they smelled urine that didn’t come from an elephant in their herd. The researchers concluded that elephants can recognize and track as many as 30 of their companions. “Imagine taking your family to a crowded department store and the Christmas sales are on,” said psychologist Richard Byrne, one of the scientists who participated in the study. “What a job to keep track of where four or five family members are. These elephants are doing it with 30 traveling-mates.” Elephants “almost certainly know every [member] in their group,” Byrne said, and exhibit cognitive abilities “far in advance of anything other animals have been shown to have.” 

 

Picture Credit : Google