IN 8 out 9 Feb: Hogmead

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

IN 8 out 9 Feb: Hogmead The Magic of Kenya With WorldWomenWork Join Singer Rankin on this fabulous journey January 31-February 16, 2014 Friday, January 31 NAIROBI / THE EMAKOKO www.emakoko.com Upon arrival in Nairobi you are met and transferred to The Emakoko. This fabulous family owned lodge is built into the side of a valley on the Mbagathi River which borders the Nairobi National Park. The beautifully appointed rooms look out over the game park so one can fall asleep to the sounds of Africa, a lion roaring or the cry of a lone hyena, an amazing contrast to the normal sounds of any sleeping city. EXPLORE, Inc. PO Box 776369 Steamboat Springs, CO 80477 Phone: 970 871-0065 Fax: 970 888-596-6377 email: [email protected] Saturday, February 1 LAKE NAIVASHA / OLERAI HOUSE www.olerai.com This morning you are transferred by vehicle to Naivasha and the Olerai House (approximately 2 hours), owned by Oria Douglas-Hamilton. The Olerai House is an enchanting flower-covered farmhouse, shaded under tall yellow acacias and watched over in the far distance by an extinct blue volcano, Mount Longonot. Sweet smelling jasmine, home baked biscuits and country flowers welcome you to this charming farm house. Olerai lies in the heart of a private game sanctuary where you can walk among herds of zebra, giraffe, eland and other antelope. At night hippos emerge from the lake to graze on the lawns - an unforgettable sight to see these lumbering animals outside your bedroom window. You can also enjoy a cruise on Lake Naivasha in a beautiful gondola, experience the fabulous bird watching, or just relax at the pool. The lake itself is home to hundreds of hippo and boasts one of the greatest diversities of birdlife in the world, with more than 400 species recorded to date. Accommodations consist of five en-suite bedrooms decorated with local art, handmade rugs and colorful tapestries, all arranged around the original cottage, which has been converted into a stylish living and dining room. Sunday-Tuesday, February 2-4 MASAI MARA / SERIAN CAMP www.serian.net Conservation Efforts: The Serian Trust: www.serian.net/conservation/seriantrust After lunch on February 2 you are transferred to the airstrip for your flight to the Masai Mara National Reserve. Upon arrival you are met and transferred to Serian Camp. This wonderful camp is located in the Mara North Conservancy, a beautiful private wilderness area of more than 74,000 acres. It is a vital part of the Masai Mara ecosystem as it forms the north-western zone, bordering the Masai Mara National Reserve in the south of Kenya. The Masai Mara National Reserve is probably the most famous in Kenya and offers breathtaking views and an extraordinary density of animals, including "the Big Five" (lions, leopard, elephant, buffalo, rhinoceros) and many varieties of plains game. The area is also an ornithologist’s dream with four hundred and fifty-three recorded bird species in the Mara, fifty-three of which are raptors, all vying for space in the clear blue skies. Serian Camp features seven private marquee tents, each unique in their own way, furnished with large double beds, flanked by bedside tables and writing desks. The adjoining "bush bathrooms" include a shower, twin basins, large bush bathtub and flush toilet. Hanging swathes of cotton and canvas walls provide complete privacy. Wednesday-Sunday, February 5-9 SAMBURU NATIONAL PARK / ELEPHANT WATCH CAMP www.elephantwatchsafaris.com Conservation Efforts: Save the Elephants www.savetheelephants.org On the morning of February 5 you fly to the Samburu National Park and the beautiful Elephant Watch Camp (also owned by Oria Douglas-Hamilton). The camp is perched on the sand banks of the Ewaso Ngiro River, beneath wide-spreading Kigelia trees and Acacia Elatiors. Iain Douglas-Hamilton has spent nearly 40 years studying elephant behavior, and Elephant Watch Camp and the greater Samburu National Reserve is the perfect place to observe and learn about these incredible creatures. The reserve offers shelter to 66 known elephant family units, numbering 900 elephants in total, and the camp is home to some of the largest bulls in the area. In addition, the area has other notable northern inhabitants, including the slim-necked Gerenuk, reticulated giraffe, Grevy zebras, Beisa oryx, and over 350 resident birds, with an additional 70 migrant species. Enjoy early morning or evening bush walks along well-travelled elephant paths, or collecting medicinal plants or honey, always accompanied by Samburu warriors. At times one can witness the great river crossings of camels and cattle, while walking to Samburu ceremonies and learning about their culture, dances and fire making. At Elephant Watch Camp, each of the netted tents has been specially designed around its own trees and is made for maximum coolness, breeze, privacy and protection. En-suite bathrooms have beautiful handmade basins and painted buckets filled with clean, cool water. Each tent hangs under a wide, thatched roof with its own verandah. The tents are filled with multicolored cotton cloth, large beds, works of art, crisp cotton sheets, soft pillows, and a “bush” cupboard for your clothes with hand painted hangers and bath robes. You learn about Iain Douglas-Hamilton’s Save the Elephants Project: Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton's groundbreaking study of elephant behavior in Tanzania in the 1960s paved the way for elephant research and conservation today. Intrigued by their intelligence, Iain developed a passion for elephant protection. In chronicling the sharp decline of elephant populations in the 1980s, he was the first to alert the world to the poaching crisis and helped bring about the world ivory trade ban.With a doctorate in zoology from Oxford, honored with the Netherlands’ prestigious Order of the Golden Ark conservation award, and inducted into the Order of the British Empire in 1993, Iain is respected as one of the world’s principal authorities on the African elephant. He and his wife Oria have co-authored two award-winning books, Among the Elephants and Battle for the Elephants, and have made numerous films to make the world aware that the largest land mammals are sensitive beings displaying complex levels of consciousness. Iain founded Save the Elephants in 1993, involving local people in both conservation efforts and research. As Director of Save the Elephants, Iain is pioneering the development of live tracking technology to monitor and interpret elephant movements. Iain serves as advisor to the Kenya Wildlife Services and other government conservation agencies. On the international level, he is a member of the Technical Advisory Group to the CITES Convention on Monitoring of the Illegal Killing of Elephants and serves on the Data Review Task Force of IUCN’s African Elephant Specialist Group. Monday-Wednesday, February 10-12 TSAVO NATIONAL PARK / SATAO CAMP www.sataocamp.com Conservation Efforts: The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org On the morning of February 10, Oria Douglas-Hamilton joins you on the flight to the Tsavo National Park. This Park is Kenya’s largest wildlife refuge, harboring the country’s single largest population of elephants and a greater biodiversity of species than any other park in the world. It is here that Oria takes you on a once in a lifetime adventure deep into the world of the last big tuskers who survive by the Grace of God. On the way you stop at the Sheldrick Trust in Voi, where orphaned elephants that have been cared for by the staff at Sheldrick’s in Nairobi have now turned into adolescents and are being slowly reintroduced into the wild. Here you witness the delightful sight of their playful morning mud bath. After brunch alongside the river you are driven to the Satao Camp which is laid out in a semi-circle to ensure that each private African style tent has a full view of the camps “own” watering hole from their veranda. This central watering hole draws lion, leopard, cheetah, zebras, giraffes, stripped hyena, buffalos, elephants and many more beautiful animals. The tents are attractively furnished with locally made beds and unique African designs. Each spacious tent has a private bathroom with running water. The shower however is in the true African style, whereby the camp staff brings hot water in the evening for your “bucket” shower. The bathrooms are very spacious, slate floors with stunning wooden framework, the wash basins sunken into the structure, all fitted with flushing toilet. Thursday-Saturday, February 13-15 LAMU ISLAND / MANDA BAY www.mandabay.com Conservation Efforts: www.lamcot.org On the morning of February 13 you are flown directly to Lamu Island. Upon arrival you are met and transferred by boat to the private, idyllic Manda Island and your resort, Manda Bay which is on the northern most peninsular of the island in the Lamu / Kiwayu archipelago. From your luxurious beach front room you have views out across the azure waters of the Indian Ocean. Each room is an individual cottage, constructed with local materials in traditional coastal style, with palm thatch roofs and woven matting covering the floors. Manda Bay is totally private yet only a 20-minute boat ride from the restaurants and ancient culture of Shela and Lamu Town. While soft yellow sand and coconut palms surround the lodge, the bush behind proves a haven for the local wildlife, hosting a large number of birds as well as mongoose, civet cat, porcupine, genet, dik-dik, buffalo and bush buck. During your stay you have the opportunity to take part in water sports such as deep sea fishing in search of the marlin and sailfish, windsurfing, water skiing and scuba diving, cultural visits and dhow safaris and more.
Recommended publications
  • Conservation and Management Strategy for the Elephant in Kenya 2012-2021
    Conservation and Management Strategy for the Elephant in Kenya 2012-2021 Compiled by: Moses Litoroh, Patrick Omondi, Richard Kock and Rajan Amin Plate 4. Winds 2 Family crossing the Ewaso Ng’iro River, Samburu National Reserve - Lucy King, Save the Elephants ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First, we thank the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) Director, Julius Kipng’etich and KWS Board of Trustees for approving this as a priority activity amongst the core business of KWS. Conservation and We also sincerely thank Keith Lindsay, Winnie Kiiru and Noah Sitati for preparing Management Strategy the background information and facilitating the eleven consultative for the Elephant stakeholder-workshops that were held across the country. This ensured the in Kenya views of as many stakeholders as possible were accommodated into this strategy document. Special thanks to all the stakeholders of the final strategy 2012-2021 development workshop, held at Mpala Research Centre, Nanyuki, which © Kenya Wildlife Service included representatives from United Republic of Tanzania; Uganda Government and the Government of Southern Sudan that finally formulated this National Elephant Management and Conservation Strategy. Our sincere gratitude also to the following individuals for reviewing the first draft : Munira Anyonge Bashir, Julian Blanc, Holly Dublin, Francis Gakuya, Ian Douglas-Hamilton, Ben Kavu, Juliet King, Lucy King, Margaret Kinnaird, Ben Okita, Lamin Seboko, Noah Sitati, Diane Skinner, Richard Vigne and David Western. Frontcover: We are greatly indebted to the following institutions for funding the formulation of this strategy : Born Free Foundation; CITES MIKE Programme; Darwin Initiative Plate 1. African Elephant. Samantha Roberts, Zoological / CETRAD; KWS; People’s Trust for Endangered Species; Tusk Trust; United States Society of London Fish and Wildlife Service; World Wildlife Fund (EARPO) and Zoological Society of London (ZSL).
    [Show full text]
  • Preserving the African Elephant for Future Generations
    OCCASIONAL PAPER 219 Governance of Africa's Resources Programme July 2015 Preserving the African Elephant for Future Generations s ir a f f Ross Harvey A l a n o ti a rn e nt f I o te tu sti n In ica . h Afr ts Sout igh l Ins loba African Perspectives. G ABOUT SAIIA The South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA) has a long and proud record as South Africa’s premier research institute on international issues. It is an independent, non-government think tank whose key strategic objectives are to make effective input into public policy, and to encourage wider and more informed debate on international affairs, with particular emphasis on African issues and concerns. It is both a centre for research excellence and a home for stimulating public engagement. SAIIA’s occasional papers present topical, incisive analyses, offering a variety of perspectives on key policy issues in Africa and beyond. Core public policy research themes covered by SAIIA include good governance and democracy; economic policymaking; international security and peace; and new global challenges such as food security, global governance reform and the environment. Please consult our website www.saiia.org.za for further information about SAIIA’s work. ABOUT THE GOVERNA NCE OF AFRI C A ’ S R E S OURCES PROGRA MME The Governance of Africa’s Resources Programme (GARP) of the South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA) is funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The programme contributes to policy governing the exploitation and extraction of Africa’s natural resources by assessing existing governance regimes and suggesting alternatives to targeted stakeholders.
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Mid-Year Report
    2021 MID-YEAR REPORT Front cover and this page: Forest elephants gather in Dzanga Bai, Dzanga Sangha Protected Area, Central African Republic, to socialize and dig for minerals. © Miguel Bellosta/WWF Overview As the COVID-19 crisis continues, much of Africa remains in some level of lock-down and under travel restrictions, despite the relatively low level of infection in most countries. However, ECF partners are continuing their work, and there is no sign of COVID-19 leading to an increase in elephant poaching and ivory trafficking—although a five ton ivory seizure in Nigeria in January 2021 was cause for concern. Some loosening of travel restrictions has allowed stalled activities to resume. Technicians have finally gained access to Nouabalé Ndoki in northern Congo to set up a new radio system, for example, and an ultralight aircraft was flown into Zakouma in Chad. As elephant poaching declines, a new crisis of human-elephant conflict is developing. In many places this presents a grave threat to the survival of elephants. For example, in Samburu in northern Kenya, the home of Save the Elephants, nearly half as many elephants were shot by herders (without the ivory being taken), as were killed at the height of the poaching outbreak. To address this growing threat, the ECF continues to expand its grantmaking to include human-elephant coexistence projects across the continent. Forest elephants Forest elephants are often overlooked and need more attention. Shy and elusive creatures, you’re more likely to hear or smell them than to see them—even if they’re only a few yards away—and they live in remote and difficult parts of Africa seldom visited by tourists.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 REPORT Front Cover: © Ryan Wilkie
    2020 REPORT Front cover: © Ryan Wilkie. This page: Forest elephants in Nouabalé Ndoki National Park, Republic of Congo. © Zanne Labuschagne / WCS. Demand for ivory may also have been affected. When COVID-19 was linked to bats and pangolins in 2020, Chinese law enforcement officials became very active in clamping down on all illegal Overview wildlife trade, increasing pressure on ivory traders. Potential consumers may have shied away from buying ivory because of concern about the increased penalties for being caught. 2020 has been a strange year in What the post-COVID future holds is uncertain. Will there be a surge of pent-up demand every way, including for elephant for ivory when Chinese tourists start travelling again and a spike in trafficking as smuggling conservation. Yet despite the routes reopen, or will the Chinese authorities successfully continue their clampdown on trade uncertainty of the pandemic and its and sales? impact on wildlife in Africa, we’ve seen some unexpected and surprisingly ELEPHANT POACHING REDUCED IN MUCH OF positive outcomes for elephants. EAST AND SOUTHERN AFRICA Africa appears to have been less directly affected by the pandemic than other parts of Elephant poaching across much of the savannah elephant range in east and southern Africa has the world. There have been severe economic been reduced. Six years ago there were 26 ECF sites across Africa where so many elephants impacts, especially in the tourism industry, were being killed by poachers that their continued survival was uncertain. Today, poaching in 15 but civil disorder has thankfully been avoided, of these sites has been reduced to a point that it does not pose a current threat.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2006-2007
    ANNUAL REPORT 2006-2007 2 Table of Contents Message from the Founder ………………………………………………………………………………..4 Chairman’s message ……………………………………………………………………………………...5 Elephant Voices …………………………………………………………………………………………..6 Behaviour Study …………………………………………………………………………………………..8 Long Term Monitoring …………………………………………………………………………………...9 Solar Panels ……………………………………………………………………………………...10 Tracking Animals for Conservation ……………………………………………………………………..11 Elephant Geofencing …………………………………………………………………………………….12 Geofencing in Ol Pejeta …………………………………………………………………………13 Marsabit GPS Tracking Project …………………………………………………………………………14 Max Graham & Darwin Initiative ………….……………………………………………………15 Human Footprint, Mali ………………………………………………………………………………….16 SEARS Project ……………………………………………………………………………………..........17 Bees, Trees and Elephants ………………………………………………………………………………18 Elephant Debarking Study ………………………………………………………………………………20 South African Transboundary Project …………………………………………………………………..21 Education Programme …………………………………………………………………………………...23 CITES 2007 ……………………………………………………………………………………..............25 Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants (MIKE) ……………………………………………………27 STE Events ……………………………………………………………………………………................29 Bernard’s wedding ………………………………………………………………………………29 Lewa Marathon ………………………………………………………………………………….29 National Geographic Visit ………………………………………………………………………30 Patrol car donation to Samburu County Council ………………………………………………..30 STE Services …………………………………………………………………………………….............31 Elephant News Service ………………………………………………………………………….31
    [Show full text]
  • Africa Forward Year in Review 2016 from Science to Our Mission
    AFRICA FORWARD YEAR IN REVIEW 2016 FROM SCIENCE TO OUR MISSION SOLUTIONS The mission of The Nature Conservancy is Desert to coast, forest to faucet to conserve the lands and waters on which Communities to national governments all life depends. Traditional local wisdom to new ideas Boots on the ground to global impact. Wito wa The Nature Conservancy ni kuhifadhi ardhi na maji ambayo maisha THIS IS TNC AFRICA. yote hutegemea. Everything we do is thanks to our generous La mission de The Nature Conservancy supporters, resolute partners, and the communities est de protéger les terres et les eaux dont and leaders that inspire and teach us every day. toute vie depend. Northern Rangelands Upper Tana-Nairobi Water Fund GABON Ogooué River Basin KENYA North Coast Tuungane Northern Tanzania TANZANIA Rangelands Initiative Greater Kafue Ecosystem ZAMBIA SEYCHELLES Aridlands NAMIBIA Project area SOUTH AFRICA Cape Town Water Fund Front cover photo: Francois Loubser / Shutterstock All photos copyrighted by credited photographer zahorec / Shutterstock zahorec Roshni Lodhia Roshni Tobie Oosthuizen / Shutterstock Oosthuizen Tobie Joey Banks Joey A BETTER WAY FORWARD My family’s float trip down the Colorado River Gabon is growing, and I worry about the future. this June turned out to be more than a chance As with everywhere we work, we need to be to connect with nature: We were on a journey realistic that we can’t hold development back. through the geologic ages. As I looked up at the But we can help the people of a country find a way walls of the Grand Canyon from our small wooden forward that is better than the past.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ivory Markets of East Asia
    The Ivory Markets of East Asia Esmond Martin and Daniel Stiles Published by Save the Elephants PO Box 54667 7 New Square Nairobi Lincoln’s Inn Kenya London WC2A 3RA March 2003 © Esmond Martin and Daniel Stiles, March 2003 All rights reserved ISBN No. 9966-9683-3-4 Front cover photograph: Japanese craftsmen still carve the finest ivory items for the local market, such as this recently made 30 cm figurine. Photo credit: Esmond Martin Published by Save the Elephants, PO Box 54667, Nairobi, Kenya and 7 New Square, Lincoln’s Inn, London WC2A 3RA, United Kingdom. Printed by Majestic Printing Works Ltd., PO Box 42466, Nairobi, Kenya. The Ivory Markets of East Asia Esmond Martin and Daniel Stiles Drawings by Andrew Kamiti Published by Save the Elephants PO Box 54667 c/o Ambrose Appelbe Nairobi 7 New Square, Lincoln’s Inn Kenya London WC2A 3RA 2002 ISBN 9966-9683-3-4 1 Contents List of tables...................................................................................................................................... 3 Executive summary ......................................................................................................................... 5 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 7 Methodology .................................................................................................................................... 9 Results...............................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 2010 STE DONOR REPORT FINAL Save The
    Annual Report 2009 - 2010 A letter from our founder These are dangerous times for elephants with the expanding planetary human footprint. Elephants indicate the catastrophic trend in the tropical forest, and elsewhere, towards loss of biodiversity. The Africa we knew in the 1960s has changed beyond belief in the reduction of wild places. In the sad game of triage there are some major necessary battles for the last natural places. One of these is to oppose a proposed veterinary fence, intended to increase beef production for the Middle East, that would ring the entire Laikipia District in Photo: Lisa Hoffner Photo: Northern Kenya. If built it would cut all wildlife migration routes that are marked out so well by the elephants we track. “elephants are an indicator of the For elephants the ugly face of ivory trading is raising it’s head again, catastrophic trend in especially in Central Africa. One wonders what will get them first, over-use the tropics towards loss of biodiversity” through direct take for ivory, or destruction of their habitats so they have no home left to live in, as is happening to the beleagured elephants of Asia. Yet there is hope, which I see in the people who work for STE and in the colleagues with whom we make common cause in the field, at CITES and abroad. From Kenya to South Africa and Mali, our data now move into a new plane of practicality, giving birth to analyses that can be used by the planners to secure a future for elephants and their environment.
    [Show full text]
  • The Last Sahelian Elephants. Ranging
    The Last Sahelian Elephants Ranging Behavior, Population Status and Recent History of the Desert Elephants of Mali By Stephen Blake Philippe Bouché Henrik Rasmussen Anne Orlando Iain Douglas-Hamilton August 2003 Contents Contents..................................................................................................................... 5 Foreword.................................................................................................................... 7 Introduction............................................................................................................... 8 The country......................................................................................................... 11 The Gourma region ............................................................................................ 11 The Radio Tracking Study....................................................................................... 13 Methods .............................................................................................................. 13 Results ................................................................................................................. 19 Dung transects..................................................................................................... 28 Aerial Census ........................................................................................................... 30 Introduction........................................................................................................ 30
    [Show full text]
  • Save the Elephants Internship Travel Dates: 03 June–12 August
    JAMES RENNIE BEQUEST REPORT Expedition/Project/Conference Title: Save the Elephants Internship Travel Dates: 03 June–12 August 2009 Location: Samburu National Reserve, Kenya Group Member(s): Sarah White Aims: • To assist with the long-term monitoring of elephant populations within the Samburu-Laikipia ecosystem in northern central Kenya, through direct observations and remote tracking data generated through the use of GPS radio-collars. • To assist with the removal and fitting of GPS collars to elephants in the field. • To analyse the performance of nearly 250 GPS collars used by Save the Elephants since 1998 and disseminate this information to other researchers through publication of the results. OUTCOME (not less than 300 words):- Introduction Save the Elephants (STE) was founded in 1993 by Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton, one of the world’s leading authorities on the African elephant, Loxodonta Africana . The organisation aims to secure a future for elephants by sustaining the ecological integrity of the places in which they live, which involves the four core activities of scientific research, protection and monitoring, global education and local grass-roots community involvement. Pure research is being carried out to help us better understand the ecology and behaviour of the African elephant, including migration patterns and range sizes, mating strategies, communication channels, consciousness and the complexity of their social structures. Applied research is also helping to reduce conflict with humans whilst allowing elephants continued access to the areas important to them. A key component of this research is the use of Global Positioning System (GPS) radio-tracking collars, pioneered by STE during the 1990s.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual REPORT 2015 a LETTER from OUR OUR MISSION
    拯 救 大 象 Annual REPORT 2015 A LETTER FROM OUR OUR MISSION FOUNDER o secure a future for elephants and sustain the beauty and Tecological integrity of the places they live, to promote year ago we delivered news of escalating man’s delight in their intelligence and the diversity of their A ivory prices in the East. Tusks were selling for three times more than they had just four world, and to develop a tolerant relationship between the years before. Yet 2015 marked a turning point. two species. In May the Chinese Government announced their intent to end their domestic trade in ivory, a pledge backed up by President Xi Jinping and President Obama for America in September. By November 2015 our consultants Vigne and Martin showed the price of ivory had almost halved, although currently at circa $1,000 per kilo it still remains a strong driver of illegal killing. In East Africa, the status of elephant populations has improved across much of Kenya, in the Parks of Uganda and Northern Tanzania. However, industrial-scale elephant Elephant tracking has long been our speciality, killing has continued in the important Southern and this year we have moved to make our Tanzania elephant populations and in adjoining systems available to all. A crack team of Mozambique. With the Democratic Republic software engineers from Vulcan, supported of Congo now largely emptied of elephants, by Paul Allen, are busy transforming the Gabon is in the front line of the battle for architecture into an open-source platform. forest elephants. Likewise Mali’s rare desert This has great promise for enhancing anti- elephants are in acute danger, from a surge poaching and protected area planning across in poaching and instability caused by a failed Africa.
    [Show full text]
  • And the African Honey Bee (Apis Mellifera Scutellata) and Its Potential Application As an Elephant Deterrent
    The interaction between the African elephant (Loxodonta africana africana) and the African honey bee (Apis mellifera scutellata) and its potential application as an elephant deterrent A thesis submitted to the University of Oxford for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Zoology Lucy E. King Balliol College 2010 Declaration: This thesis was supported by a joint ESRC/NERC studentship grant. The proposed blend of the two research fields has been adhered to, creating an interdisciplinary thesis with a 65% emphasis on Natural Science and a 35% emphasis on Social Science. I confirm that this thesis is all my own work, unless otherwise stated, and with the exception of three data analyses in Chapter 3. These analyses, and assistance with the data collection, were conducted by my colleague Dr Joseph Soltis from the Bioacoustic Laboratory at Disney’s Animal Kingdom, Education and Science Department, Florida. Specifically, the data analyses Dr Soltis conducted were: Section 3.2.1. Analysis of 120 infant (0-3 year old) zoo elephant calf vocalisations from Disney’s acoustic database to help us identify 0-2 year old vocalisations from our wild Samburu acoustic data set and remove them from the sample. Section 3.2.2. Measuring and statistical analysis of the fundamental frequency, mean frequency and frequency range of vocalisations recorded from our wild Samburu elephant database. Section 3.2.3. Shifting of the second formant in the bee rumble to represent those more typical of the white noise rumble to enable us to carry out the playback experiments as described in the remainder of Chapter 3.
    [Show full text]