Elephants are like people
Elephants are like people: How to fight, flirt and feel pachidermele
Elephants have a behavior similar to that of humans and "fight" on the routes to go, say researchers who studied the behavior of elephants in Kenya's Amboseli National Park.
Researchers from the longest continuous study of the Elephants, lasting almost 40 years, say that animals use a communication system, writes dailymail.co.uk.
Phyllis Lee of Stirling University in Scotland says that negotiations on the routes which should go flock may take approximately one hour.
Also, using body language and sounds of elephants, rubbing his shoulders and dragging her fallopian tubes as a greeting, bending under the tusks and trunk as an invitation to play.
Baby elephant sucking tubes, just as their children suck their thumb when they are young, and females seem to flirt when elephant stared wide-eyed males.
Research provides evidence about the ability to feel the elephant. Previous studies have shown that elephants can feel anger, but it shows that they react to the pain of others.
"For example, when a couple approached an elephant electric fence, an older female seemed alarmed, expecting the baby to be current. Posture and show that startled eyes flashing," says Cynthia Moss, founder of the Elephant Research Project in Amboseli in 1972.
Other elephants have been seen as tranquilizers drew arrows from the skin of other members of the flock.
Researchers who followed 2,500 copies, says the elephants have the brain power like that of apes, but not as advanced as dolphins or humans.
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Elephants Language:
S-shaped trunk: curiosity or waiting
rubbing shoulders: hello or link group
intertwining tubes: welcoming another elephant
tube bending inside: invitation to play
standing: aggression
suction tube (manifestation of chickens): silence
alignment "shoulder to shoulder": "On the Road"
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