Eavesdropping On Forest Elephants
Eavesdropping On Forest Elephants
NEW HAVEN â African forest elephants live in dense equatorial forests where they are rarely seen and impossible to census by standard methods. In the Bioacoustics Research Program at Cornell Universityâs Laboratory of Ornithology, the Elephant Listening Project is creating an acoustic monitoring system that uses elephant vocal patterns as indicators of the size, composition and reproductive health of populations.
On Thursday, March 4, Elephant Listening Project leader Katy Payne will offer a free talk, âEavesdropping on Forest Elephants.â Her program will be in the auditorium of Yale Peabody Museum, 170 Whitney Avenue. It will begin at 4 pm.
The Dzanga forest clearing in the Central African Republic where these relationships are being explored is extraordinary for its beauty, for the fact that it contains the only visible forest elephant population in Africa. It is also perfect for the long-term study documenting associations among more than 2,500 identified elephants over a 14-year period.
The lecture, illustrated with sound and video, will present the projectâs innovative methodology, some of its early results, and a few stories about elephant behavior.
There is no charge to attend the lecture. Museum admission is $7 for adults, $6 for seniors, $5 for ages 3-18, and free for ages 2 and under.
The museum is wheelchair accessible. It is at 170 Whitney Avenue in New Haven; telephone 203-432-5050.