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Figure 1. Koitogor and the Samburu elephants.
(A) Koitogor Mountain – a prominent feature of the Samburu Landscape rising 300 m above the adjacent plain. (B) Three-dimensional model of Koitogor with individual elephant tracks shown as coloured lines. (C) NDVI image (February 2000) demonstrating that even in the dry season (February 2000) the hill (outlined) is greener than the plains although not the river banks (bottom). (D) Energy calculations for the costs of ascending Koitogor (grey, map topography) for a 100 kg animal (middle) and a 5000 kg elephant (top) with the colour coding indicating the basic cost of ascent from green to red (for details see text and Figure 2 legend, and the Supplemental data). Figure 1. Koitogor and the Samburu elephants. (A) Koitogor Mountain – a prominent feature of the Samburu Landscape rising 300 m above the adjacent plain. (B) Three-dimensional model of Koitogor with individual elephant tracks shown as coloured lines. (C) NDVI image (February 2000) demonstrating that even in the dry season (February 2000) the hill (outlined) is greener than the plains although not the river banks (bottom). (D) Energy calculations for the costs of ascending Koitogor (grey, map topography) for a 100 kg animal (middle) and a 5000 kg elephant (top) with the colour coding indicating the basic cost of ascent from green to red (for details see text and Figure 2 legend, and the Supplemental data).

Current Biology

  • Science & Nature

Wild Things: Life as We Know It

Bumblebees, elephants and endless summer

  • Smithsonian magazine, October 2006

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    Figure 1. Koitogor and the Samburu elephants.
(A) Koitogor Mountain – a prominent feature of the Samburu Landscape rising 300 m above the adjacent plain. (B) Three-dimensional model of Koitogor with individual elephant tracks shown as coloured lines. (C) NDVI image (February 2000) demonstrating that even in the dry season (February 2000) the hill (outlined) is greener than the plains although not the river banks (bottom). (D) Energy calculations for the costs of ascending Koitogor (grey, map topography) for a 100 kg animal (middle) and a 5000 kg elephant (top) with the colour coding indicating the basic cost of ascent from green to red (for details see text and Figure 2 legend, and the Supplemental data).

    Wild Things: Life as We Know It

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    A small seabird has logged the longest annual migration ever recorded. Scientists from the University of California at Santa Cruz attached monitors to 19 sooty shearwaters and found they covered some 39,000 miles over 262 days, tracing "figure eights" across the Pacific (blue, breeding grounds; yellow, northward migration; orange, wintering grounds). Arctic terns fly similarly long routes, but it's not known if they do so within a year.

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    Praying For What? Probably protection, among the males. The females occasionally bite the males' heads off during mating.
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    And? The males are love struck but not suicidal, suggests a new study by researchers at the State University of New York at Fredonia. Males approach hungry females (as opposed to well-fed females) more cautiously, court more assiduously and mount from a greater distance. Post-coitus, a male will cling to a hungry female about three times longer—perhaps waiting to seize the moment for a safe dismount.


     
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