Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Elephants: The Best Animals?
Episode Date: January 28, 2023Elephants are pretty much the best. Why? Josh and Chuck will let you know in great detail in this classic episode.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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What would you do if a secret cabal of the most powerful folks in the United States told you,
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I'm revisiting the early days of social media through the people who lived it. Listen to
Main Accounts, the story of MySpace on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you find
your favorite shows. Hey, everybody, it's me, Josh. And for this week's select, I've chosen our
February 2019 episode, Elephants colon, the best animals. Could this be the most enjoyable episode
we've ever made? It could be. It could be. I can't really think of any better one right now. So
we'll say it is for the time being. I hope you enjoyed listening to this classic episode as much
as Chuck and I enjoyed making it. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry. We're
just feeling wacky over here. You want to know why? Why? Because this is the stuff you should know
about maybe the greatest animal walking the planet, and I'm including human beings.
Yeah. Elephants. I'm big on elephants. Yes. Love elephants might be Emily's
spirit animal. She hasn't decided yet. Yeah, I can say 100% it is Yumi's. Oh, really? Oh, yeah.
Wow, they have the same spirit animal. That's going to neat. Yeah, I know. I like that.
I didn't know that. I didn't know Yumi was an elephanter. She is big time into elephantation.
An elephantist. All right, Charles, you ready for this? Yes, and really quickly because we love
elephants. We want to go on a safari one day, you know, I've mentioned before. Yeah. But now I know
and we'll get to this later. I was like, man, I want to swim with those things. Don't do it.
No. Shouldn't do it. Don't ride them. Nope. Don't do any of those things where you see people on
Facebook bragging about riding and getting bathed by elephants. Don't do it. Yeah, it's true. Like,
that's not ethical or humane because we'll just say it now. The reason why is because two elephants
are wild animals. They're not domesticated. No. Although they display some really bizarre
affectionate behavior towards humans that can make you think they are domesticated,
they're still wild animals. So to train them to basically ensure that they're not ever going to,
you know, stomp a person or something like that, you have to take them as babies and what's called
crushing their spirit and just basically scare them so bad. Or beat them physically. Right.
That's part of the process of crushing their spirit. Like, yeah, beat them, berate them,
starve them, tie their legs together, keep them in a pen, all to basically teach them that humans
are in charge and that they should be scared to death of doing anything untoward toward a human.
That's how you can ride an elephant or how you can bathe with an elephant. Or Yumi wanted a
painting by an elephant. Like, there's elephants that make paintings. There's one here in Atlanta.
Okay. That makes paintings. So we researched it right before we were about to order it. She's
like, wait a minute, let me just see if this is okay. And it turns out that they basically use
the same techniques to make an elephant do what a human wants it to. You have to be very cruel to
them usually. So there you go, people. Don't do it. Yeah, that was a weird intro. Well, it was in
my craw. Obviously it was in yours. A little bit. But let's talk about elephants, the good stuff.
There are three species. You probably grew up thinking like I did, that there's the African
elephant and the Asian elephant. Sure, everybody knows that. But now they have broken down the
African element, the elephant into two camps, the bush elephant and the forest elephant,
both African. And like I said, for many, many years, and you will still see in a lot of places
just two species, but that is not true anymore. No, one, two, three. So in the bush elephant
and the forest elephant are so closely related that if they run up against one another because
some of their habitats kind of overlap, they could reproduce and have babies, which no problem
whatsoever. But the Asian elephant is so distantly related to them, even though they seem, you know,
it's just another kind of elephant. Yeah, it's an elephant. That they probably, they could
conceivably have a kid and actually one was born in a zoo in the 70s, but he died after like I
think 12 days of an infection. That they probably aren't really supposed to, aren't supposed to
breed, I guess, is how you'd put it. Procreate. Right, have offspring. Yeah, so we're gonna
be talking about all three, not interchangeably, we'll point out when we're talking about what.
But the African bush elephant, those are the biggest ones. They have the biggest ears,
or at least larger than the Asian elephants, and both sexes for the African bush elephants
are more likely to have tusks. Some male Asian elephants have tusks, but they're not as prominent.
That's where you see the smaller tusks. And then all three species have five toes on the front feet,
but the African bush elephant has three toes on the rear. Asian elephants have four
toes on the rear on each foot. Yeah, there's a lot of different toes going on. A lot of different
toes. And the African forest elephant is generally about the same shape as his bush friend,
but they have straighter tusks because they're going, it makes sense, they're going through the
forest so their tusks don't stick way out and get caught on every other tree that they're walking by.
Yes, and I thought this was really interesting. The African forest elephants are so
elusive that they don't, they have no idea how many there are. All of the ideas about their
behavior and the stuff that they do is just assumptions made based on the bush elephant
that they're related to. They're that good at keeping away from humans. I just think that's
amazing. Yeah, and they have, they're a little bit smaller than their friends on the Savannah,
but they have the same toe arrangement as the Asian elephant, which is interesting.
So the, I never really thought about it, but like a lot of the elephants, when I think of elephants,
I never realized I was thinking of two different species, but they really do,
like the Asian elephant and the African bush elephant, they have a lot of differences that
you can just very quickly see, which is which kind. Like the Asian elephant has kind of like
the rounded dome head and they have kind of a hump back and they are a little smaller.
And then the African bush elephants, they're very, very big with the big old ears,
and they have basically what's called like a saddleback. It's kind of flat-ish.
Right. Or maybe even concave a little bit too. Yeah, and here's one of the facts of the show
for me is. There's like 50 in here. There's so many, but elephants have, they have tuskness,
like we have handedness. They use their right or their left tusk more often than the other.
And if you ever wonder which tusk is the more dominant one, look and see which one's shorter,
because that's the one that gets worn down quicker. I thought that was amazing.
Pretty neat. I just figured they were interchangeable. Yep, no. Yep, no.
So like it's really kind of, I had to stop and put myself into this, like standing,
like imagine myself standing next to these elephants for like measurements for the average.
Yeah. You're like what, six feet? Yeah, just about. I'm pretty good. I'm like a human dollar bill.
You know, a dollar bill is like a little, about six inches. Same thing here. I'm six feet.
Okay. So just stand me next to something and be like, oh, it's about six feet. Okay.
Don't you know about the dollar bill? Well, no. Is that used as a measuring device when you're
short of a ruler? Yeah, it's about six inches. What if you have no cash, but you do have a ruler?
Then you're in luck. Can you spend the ruler in a hat shop?
You could considerably trade it. Remember that guy who traded? He moved,
he went from a paperclip to like a house trading up. Oh yeah, that guy.
That guy could turn a ruler into cash. He and soy bomb share an apartment now in
an upstate New York. Soy bomb. All right. So let's talk about the size of these
ladies and men because. Okay. So everybody imagine me standing next to an elephant and
it'll really drive all this home. Yes. Right. So an African forest elephant is
Josh's height up to about eight feet at the shoulder. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. You don't measure
from the top of the dome. I wonder why they do that with animals. That's always kind of the case,
right? Because I think if the animal is like, well, I want to seem taller, they could just
lift their head up very high or something, you know, or if they're trying to keep a low profile,
they keep their head down. So the shoulder, it's tough to, you know, like when they're
having their kindergarten class picture taken. Right. The African bush elephant is taller.
It's about eight to 10 feet at the shoulder. That's the biggest one. Yeah. Four to six tons,
two to five tons on the forest African. And then Asian is seven to nine feet, about three to five
short tons. And we should say there's a lot of variation in size here because I think one of
these experts said that the outliers can be as big as 25% taller or larger overall than the average,
which is a big variation. Yeah. There's, I think the record for an Asian elephant, and remember
they're, you know, at the shoulder seven to nine feet, that's still pretty, pretty good size,
but the record was 11 and a quarter feet. Man, that's a big elephant. Like, can you imagine
that's almost two of me. Yeah. Like me standing on my own shoulders, maybe squatting down just a
little bit at the shoulder. That's how big that elephant was. Yeah. And when you, when you're
talking short tons, that's 2000 pounds. So like an African bush elephant can get on average up to
12,000 pounds. That's a big boy or girl. Yeah. The boys are a little bit bigger. And they live
a long, long time. Here's sort of some inspiring and sad facts. They can live 50 to 70 years.
They've found and recorded at least one elephant that lived to be 86 that has set the record,
which is just amazing. But here's the saddest thing. If you are a zoo elephant, you live
of maybe less than half as long. So I have to say this, the RSPCA in West Sussex, England
has been, their numbers have been controversial before, but in this 2008 study, they took
4,500 African and Asian elephants that lived in European zoos over the course of 45 years.
And this is what they came up with. So, I mean, even in the article, the people weren't necessarily
contesting this data, but I think the way that they explained it was that this was old data.
And so it gave you a good idea of how long elephants lived in captivity, you know,
a few decades ago, back before they knew more about keeping them in zoos.
Yeah. And here's what it says. It said 36 years in a national park in Kenya, 17 years in a zoo.
But it looks to me like, unless I'm reading this wrong, that elephants that work in timber camps,
you know, they're very strong. So they are still used in timber camps to haul wood
and trees and things. They actually live longer than zoo elephants?
Yeah. So the timber elephants of Burma, of me and Mar, are very well taken care of from what I
understand. Like they're considered semi captive. And for like the last 100 years or so, the people
of Burma have used them to basically move huge trees, right, to pull them out of the forest
for like logging and stuff. But they're really well cared for. There's like government veterinarians
that do health checks and each elephant has their own log. And from what I saw, which just seems
mind blowing to me because they're, you know, being held captive in a way to work for humans.
And so just based on, you know, our track record of using animals like that, it's just weird to
me that they would be very well taken care of, but supposedly they are. And they're considered
semi captive because at night they're allowed to just kind of wander around and go free in the
forest and they interact with wild Asian elephants. And that's how they actually reproduce. They're
not like, there's no kind of reproductive oversight. It's just go wild, you know. And
they apparently live very long because they're very well taken care of.
Yeah. And here's a little factoid for you. When they get pregnant in those working camps,
because they get maternity leave for about a year. Yes. So a couple of more quick facts
and then we'll take a break. Little BB elephants are cared for by their mothers until they're
anywhere between 13 and 20 years old. So it's almost like, well, not quite, but it's almost
like the human experience. A little bit, yeah. You know, somewhere in there. I doubt if you're
sending your 13 year old off, but if you're a terrible parent, maybe, let's say it's, you know,
13 to 20, let's say that's 18 years. It's about like a high school age. All right. And that's
also when they reach sexual maturity. It takes about 20 to 22 months of gestation, which is the
longest longest gestational period of any animal, I'm sorry, any mammal. And a little BB elephant
weighs between 150 and 250 pounds. That's pretty cute. Should we take a break? Yes. All right.
More poundage facts right after this.
I'm Dr. Romany and I am back with season two of my podcast, Navigating Narcissism. Narcissists are
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What's up, y'all? This is Questlove, and, you know, at QLS, I get to hang out with my friends,
Sugar Steve, Laia, Vontigolo, Unpaid Bill, and we, you know, at Questlove Supreme,
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Supreme. Chuck, I just think it's adorable that both of our wives got us into elephants.
We're going to have to take a safari together. We should do that, although that's very dangerous.
Like we don't even fly to, you know, Tennessee together and fear that the plane will go down
and the podcast will be over. I guess we could trade off then.
It would be a pretty amazing story though. The podcast would go down in history if you
and I were eaten by tigers. That would be a heck of a way to go.
Well, Emily, you make it just take it over. There you go.
And it would just all be about animals. They should do something together sometime,
you know? Like they should read, listen, or mail, or something like that.
Or they should just start their own show called Stuff You Should Know About Our Husbands.
There you go. People would love it. Good idea. I don't know if we would.
No, we would not. They'd be like, you think they're so great.
Let us tell you about these schlubs. No, no, no, no, no.
These putzes. So there should be a ding sound because you're going to use putz
on every show from now on. All right, elephants eat a hundred to six hundred
pounds of food in a day and drink between 16 and 40 gallons of water.
Say that again, brother. A hundred to six hundred pounds of food in a day.
And they are eating, and I love this, they basically spend their day
when they're awake, 14 to 16 hours a day, just sort of looking to eat and drink.
Yeah, which is, it stinks. Like if you think about it, the reason why they have to eat that
much is not because they're so big, but because, well, it is in part, but mostly because
their herbivores and their digestive system is ridiculously inefficient.
Like if elephants are as intelligent as they appear to be, and probably even more than they
appear to be, once we start to like learn more about them, I think all it's going to do is
just provide a cascading series of woes. Like if they didn't have to spend so much of their time
looking for food, what would they be doing? Maybe they would learn to paint on their own.
Maybe. So the reason why they're, they eat so much, again, is because they don't digest a lot of
that food. And so undigested stuff comes out as poop in such frequency that you can actually
make paper out of it. There's elephant poop paper. People use it, and they get the fiber
out of the elephant poop to make paper with. Oh, wow. That's how undigested so much of their food is.
Yeah. They eat, like you said, they are herbivores. So they, all kinds of plants,
they love fruit. I imagine that's like the sweet, sweet nectar when compared to, you know,
like dry bamboo. And they can study their poop and learn a lot from their poop, just like most
animals. Well, elephants don't study their own poop. Well, how do you know? They might.
No, of course, scientists study it. And they can, they can learn a lot by,
you know, cause like you said, those African forest elephants, they're very elusive in the forest,
and you can't find them, but you can find their poop everywhere. Yeah. You can tell their anus
size from their poop size, which sounds hilarious, and it is, but you also can tell like the age
and the general size of the elephant based on their anus size, which you find based on their
poop size. That's right. Plus you can make a banging paper out of it too. Sure.
Sure. The range, the African bush elephants have a very wide range across Africa, south of the
Sahara Desert. And the forest elephant are in rainforest, that's the name, near the equator,
sort of around Cameroon is where they're largely centered. As far as Asian, they're all over
Southeast Asia. They have some in China even, but India is really where you're going to find the
most Asian elephants. See, Thailand, Indonesia, Sumatra, Sri Lanka, they each have more than a
thousand, and we already talked about Burma a little bit. They have the second largest total
population worldwide, I guess, except for India. They have the largest captive population though,
at least 5,000 all working in those government timber camps, which again, I'm just, I'm sure
somebody's going to write and be like, I don't know, they're not taking very well care of,
but I didn't see anything like that, which I'm just astounded by. I don't know if that's coming
across or not, but I'm really astounded. Yeah. And if you listen to our episode,
well, I guess it's either from last week or it'll be next week.
And then I'm predicting the future about elephant swimming in the, which one was that?
Loch Ness. They do love to swim and they are very floaty. They're very buoyant.
They won't, you're not going to find an elephant drowned in the water. They can not only swim,
but if they get tired, they can just float. Bob. Yeah, they can just bob in the water.
And they, apparently an elephant has been recorded as swimming 48 kilometers, 30 miles.
Pretty amazing. And six hours at a stretch. Yeah. That's pretty nuts. And baby elephants,
one of the, one of the greatest things you can do is sit around and watch baby elephants splashing
in kiddie pools on YouTube. Yeah. They love it. They love to swim. Yeah. Let's talk about the trunk
because when you see an elephant and you watch this, if you'd like really study an elephant for
a while, you look at that trunk, it's, it's, it's amazing. It looks like a completely separate
living thing almost sometimes. It would, yeah, but it's a nose. It's basically their upper lip
and their nose combined together in this elongated form. Yeah. But when they, you know, you watch
an elephant, a lot of times they're just standing still, but this trunk is doing so many crazy
looking things. Oh, I see what you mean. Yeah. It just looks like its own, like its own animal almost.
Like a thing from the Adams family, the disembodied hand. That's exactly what I was thinking.
Or the, the alien hand syndrome guy from our short-lived TV show. Right, right. Basically the
same thing, right? Exactly. And one of the big theories is, is that trunk, and this makes a
lot of sense to me, evolutionarily speaking, is that trunk developed as compensation? Basically,
I can reach things higher without having to grow, or I can get things on the ground without having
to crouch down and put my head on the ground, which makes me very vulnerable to attack. Right.
So I have this big, long, extended nose that can go get stuff on the ground or up above me,
and I can still sort of be safe. Yes. Okay. So it's a nose that you can use to get things with,
including water. Apparently it holds up to two gallons of water in a trunk. Just in the trunk.
But it's also really dexterous, I guess. Yeah. It has 100,000 muscles in it,
both fast twitch and slow twitch. So I've read that an elephant can pull a limb off of a tree
with its trunk or pluck a blade of grass out of the ground. Like it can, it can do it all,
basically. It can deal cards, whatever. But you shouldn't train an elephant to deal cards.
No, just put the cards down and walk away. Yeah. And if it happens, it happens.
That is the motto of dealing with elephants. And initially, you know, evolution might have said,
hey, use these great things to drink water out of. But like we said, and we'll continue to hammer
this home, elephants are super smart. So they said, hey, I've got this really long fifth arm that
has 200,000 muscles in it. So I can get food and I can bathe myself and I can pick up dust and mud
and put it all over my body if I don't want to get sunburned or if I want to have a sort of
lo-fi insect repellent. Yeah. Or I can communicate with my body over there with my trunk.
Yeah. There's a lot of stuff they do with their trunk that we're starting to figure out. There's
a group called Elephant Voices. And they have an elephant gestures database based on
decades of studying elephants up close. Yeah. And they have a really complex and intricate,
basically a sign language that includes more than just their trunk, but their trunk plays
a big role in it too. Yeah. There's one example on this article, flop trunk on head. And that is
an elephant basically raising the head vertically and then flipping their trunk really high up
in the air and letting it plop down on their head. That is a very specific play-based gesture.
Kind of a joyful play. Yeah. Like if you see an elephant doing that, they're having a good time.
Yeah. The elephant gestures database, the names of the different things,
the gestures sound like they were all written by Nell. Flop trunk on head.
Mr. Chikame. So I've got another fact of the podcast for you. Ready? All right. Baby elephants
suck their trunks like human babies suck their thumbs. Oh my God. That's amazing.
I mean, forget about it, man. I know. I can't even with this stuff. I know.
And now Tim Burton's going to ruin it all with a new Dumbo movie. Oh, is it live action or?
You know, he's, yeah, I think it's live action in CGI. Why? He's going to ruin it? Sure he is.
Oh, poor Tim Burton. He's the ruiner of things. You ruined everything. You ruined her.
Elephants, all elephants originated in Africa and then spread throughout the world from there,
including North America across, like everything else, across the Bering Strait land bridge,
or ice bridge, depending on when it was, and then all the way into South America from there.
Yeah. You could make a pretty strong case that they drew humans into North America
because they migrated first and humans probably followed them as hunters over like millions of
years later. Oh, yeah. So the, this is weird. So the mammoth and the elephant share a common
ancestor, their most recent common ancestor is six million years in the past. Yeah. Which means
that elephants and mammoths coexisted at the same time. Like elephants have been around a really
long time. It's just, I guess when they moved out of Africa and beyond Asia up into, you know,
the Russian steps in Siberia and across the land bridge and then back down into North America and
then eventually South America, they took on like many different forms, but the woolly mammoth is
the one you typically think of. Sure. But there were elephants at the same time. There were also
mammoths. And there were other kinds of mammoths besides the woolly mammoth, which I think we
did a woolly mammoth episode. We did do a woolly mammoth episode. All right. If you say so, we
did. And they were all over. There was also a type of mammoth, or not even a mammoth. It was just a
different type of elephant called a gompathyr that was in South America. And if you look at a
gompathyr, I think it was a little bigger than the elephants of today, but it just looks like an
elephant. And they used to hunt them down in South America and hunted them to extinction,
they think, possibly a combination of that and climate change. But you don't think of elephants
in the Americas, but there definitely were some here for a very long time.
But climate change can't be real, Josh, because it snowed last week.
Right. Well, yeah, exactly. I mean, just imagine that it hadn't snowed and we would all know that
climate change is real. So there is a, or was rather, a naturalist in the 18th century, France
name, and this is a great name. You want to say it? Actually, you're a French expert.
Oh, I wasn't expecting this. George Louis Leclerc, the Count de Bouffant.
Was that his title? Is that what that means? Yeah, he's the Count of, well, Bouffant.
Okay. Which I'd be like, can I get another count ship?
What? Instead of Bouffant? What's wrong with Bouffant?
It's so-so. It's okay. It's a kind of a garish word. You know what I'm saying?
Sure. Sounds like Bouffant. Yeah. And like, who wants a Bouffant hairdo these days?
Nobody. Nobody except the B-52s. Yep. And maybe that lady from the old, the...
March Simpson? No, what was the name of that steakhouse? The local steakhouse.
Oh, outback steaks. No. What's the other one? Longhorn.
Do you remember the ads of the 90s with the lady with the Bouffant?
No. Longhorn steaks? Yeah, you do. I really don't. What was her deal?
She was just like a proto hipster lady. Really?
Yeah. It was on the Longhorn commercials. Very interesting.
Man, now I could go for a steak. Yeah, me too.
All right. So where were we? Oh, right. The 18th century naturalist.
He wrote a lot about natural history and he loved the elephant and he was really knocked out
by the intelligence of... Why is that funny? Just the idea of him being like, man, I am knocked out
by the elephant. That is far out, man. He was knocked out by the brain and the intelligence
of the elephant. Right. And he said it approaches near to man and understanding as much at least
as matter can approach to mind. Which I understood the first half of that.
I think in 18th century speak, that means these dudes are really smart.
Right. And I mean, he wasn't just making stuff up here. He was on to something because
elephants are extremely intelligent from what we can tell. And again,
we're just learning more and more about them. And as we learn more about them and
study the way that they interact with one another and how they interact with us,
we're like, well, these are some of the sharpest animals on the planet.
Yeah. They have different personalities. Each elephant has its own personality.
And you've heard about an elephant not forgetting. They do have a great memory
and great recognition ability. And this story, everyone...
I love this story....is kind of the best thing ever. In 1999,
at a sanctuary in Tennessee, there was a resident elephant named Ginny.
They introduced a new lady named Shirley, an Asian elephant, and they went berserk for one
another. They were checking each other out. They were slapping trunks. They were really
animated. They described it as euphoria, bellowing, and then Ginny starts bellowing.
And they said that I've never experienced anything that intense without it being aggression.
They did say a little digging. And it turns out that 23 years earlier, for just a few months,
Ginny and Shirley were in the same circus together. And they saw each other 23 years later and were
like, girl, what have you been up to? What I think is cool about that story,
in addition to the fact that they remembered each other after 23 years,
but that also it says so much about them that they were able to form a bond.
Yeah. Like that. Just a few months.
In just a few months. I think this is a tremendous amount about elephants and elephant society.
What a story. Love it. Yep.
So because they have these kind of relationships with one another,
they have really complex, as Ed puts it, very rich societies and families and groups that
they live in. Their social networks are very rich and complex, right?
Yeah. Big time.
And one of the ways, I mean, like, I didn't realize this, but I came across this in researching
this article. Apparently, like if you see like a bunch of deer hanging around or some birds flying
together, they're not like buddies or friends. They don't know one from another typically.
Stop. Don't say that.
But I mean, I hadn't really thought about that before. I always just assumed.
Take it back.
I always assumed at least they knew each other by smell or something like that. But from what
I saw, I can't remember where I saw it, but they were saying like it's atypical for animals to
recognize one another as individuals. And that elephants definitely do as evidenced by that
story. But that kind of lends evidence to the idea that elephants are self-aware, which is a
growing awareness among humans that elephants seem to be self-aware. And one way we test
animals to see if they're self-aware is called the mirror test, which is kind of a test that
we can improve on it. But it does.
For sure.
It does suggest that the possibility that the animal sees itself as an individual.
Yeah. So this was developed by Gordon Gallup, Jr. in 1970. So I definitely think there's an
update that we need here. We need this 2.0 version. But they did, they test a lot of animals,
apes, great apes, dolphins, orcas, and magpies have passed this test along with one Asian
elephant named Happy. And what they do is they get a mirror, they take the animal and put a red
mark and paint this red mark and let's say on their face something that they can't see without a
mirror. They hold up the mirror. And if the animal looks at the mirror and then doesn't like, like
if they did this to me, I would throw my poop at the mirror and smash the mirror.
But if the animal doesn't do that and they actually touch their own face,
then they understand that they're seeing themselves and not some other weird animal
across from them.
Right. They see, they realize that they're seeing their reflection and that shows self-awareness.
If they laugh at how silly they look, then that really shows self-awareness,
maybe even self-consciousness, you know?
Yeah. And it takes human children a couple of years to pass this test, we should say.
Yes. So there's apparently not all the great apes pass the test that gorillas don't,
which is weird, but they think that possibly gorillas don't because making eye contact
in the gorilla world is such an aggressive act that they just don't look at themselves in the
mirror enough to see that they have that mark on their face. That's what they think.
Yeah. And this doesn't, you know, this isn't, like we said, it's pretty lo-fi.
It's not some, you can't say this is proof that they are self-aware and sentient, but
it's a pretty cool test.
It is. Plus also, dogs don't pass it, which automatically means that it's a failure of a test
because Momo herself proves that all animals, all dogs are self-aware and smart
and perfect in every way.
Yeah. And they also do point out with dogs, like they're their best,
uh, the way they see the world is through their nose. And so maybe this isn't the best test for
them. Right. So they could do a, a synth version maybe.
Right. I don't know how you would do it. I've been trying to figure it out for days.
With Momo?
I mean, just see my head, but yeah, I'll eventually experiment on Mo.
And that, well, there is another test that they use to kind of show
self-awareness in the idea of individual identity. And that's through third party relationships.
Yeah. This is pretty cool.
So, um, they, I guess they, it says they accidentally drive a Jeep in between
an elephant and her, her offspring or baby.
And the elephant might not notice cause she's busy doing something else.
But if another elephant trumpets to the mom elephant to say, hey, there's a Jeep between you and your
baby, that elephant is indicating that it's aware that that mom and that baby are related,
that they have a relationship that has nothing to do necessarily with that third elephant who
warned the mom. Yeah.
That's not supposed to exist among an non-sentient beings.
Right.
And by the way, if all this talk about sentience and self-awareness among animals is floating
your boat, we did a two part series on animal rights that touched on this heavily.
Yeah. That's right. Because it was a famous case where they were trying to
get a personhood in human rights for a chimp, right?
Yeah. The non-human rights project, they moved on to elephants,
including that elephant happy that passed the mirror test.
Right.
And right now happy's in the Bronx zoo and the non-human rights project's position is basically
like, um, an elephant's range is like at least a hundred times what the exhibit that happy lives
in is, it's like an acre. Yeah.
And their range is so wide that in a single day, happy in Africa would probably walk about
a hundred acres, but happy as an acre and happy is a sentient being and deserves better.
And so they're trying to spring her by making her and by bestowing personhood through the courts.
And they actually got a habeas corpus issued, which you only do that for humans.
And then the only other time it's happened is with chimps through the non-human rights project.
And it's up in the air, but the judge basically said, hey, you guys need to show whether or not
you're unlawfully imprisoning an sentient being, a person basically.
Yeah. So that's where it stands right now.
All right. Well, let's take a break and contemplate that for a couple of hours.
And then we'll dust ourself off, come back and talk a little bit about the difference
between male and female elephants and more about their social component right after this.
I'm Dr. Romany and I am back with season two of my podcast,
Navigating Narcissism. Narcissists are everywhere and their toxic behavior and words can cause
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But I am here to help. As a licensed psychologist and survivor of narcissistic abuse myself,
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Each week, you will hear stories from survivors who have navigated through toxic relationships,
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Listen to Navigating Narcissism on the iHeart Radio app,
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MySpace was the first major social media company.
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And it was the first major social media company to collapse.
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My name is Joanne McNeil. On my new podcast,
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What's up, y'all? This is Questlove, and, you know, at QLS, I get to hang out with my friends.
Sugar Steve, Laia, Vontigolo, Unpaid Bill, and we, you know, at Questlove Supreme,
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Listen to Questlove Supreme on the iHeartRadio App.
App a podcast wherever you get your podcasts.
So this is fun when you talk about the male and female elephants.
This whole episode is fun.
So males leave when they're young teenagers. They leave earlier than the little ladies do.
They set off on their own.
They might move from group to group. They may join up with another family,
but by and large, they usually get around and live alone.
But they do form groups when they need to.
It's not permanent. It could change, and it is a static situation,
like going between different groups and different groups of males getting together.
But when they do get together, the males, there is a definite hierarchy involved,
seniority based on size and age, and that hierarchy is really important
to kind of maintain order when it comes to who gets the water first and stuff like that.
Which way we're going to walk to go find water or something like that.
There needs to be somebody in charge.
But supposedly when there's plenty of water and everybody's got all the food they need or whatever,
that hierarchy can break down pretty easily.
But also informally, not like it breaks down in like society just crumbles among this group of
males. It breaks down because it's not necessary, which is kind of neat.
And apparently the groups of males that hang out together are likened to a group of like old
drinking buddies. They're just rowdy. Yeah, it's kind of funny.
Rough housing and all that kind of stuff.
Uh, males occasionally will go through something.
It's kind of like being in heat, it sounds like, called musth.
Well done.
M-U-S-T-H. And this is when they just, their testosterone goes through the roof
and they are like, I need to mate like yesterday.
I got the itch.
I got a severe itch and I can't scratch it with my tusk because they're fixed.
Rough housing with my drinking buddies isn't helping.
None of that is helping.
And when they're going through this musth phase, they actually,
like all the other male elephants recognize this and say, hey,
Freddie, there's, as you can tell guys, he's really feeling it.
So why don't we let him drink first?
And why don't we just kind of go where he wants to go right now?
He's leaking a trail of urine everywhere. That's a literal physical warning to the
rest of us to stay back.
Yeah. And a little scent for ladies to say, well, well, well,
let me follow this trail and see where it goes.
It smells like sex panther.
100% of the time, what is it?
It works half the time.
Half the time it works 100% of the time.
I don't remember I should know that.
We both should, Chuck. We both just failed spectacularly.
Oh, and occasionally, and this is kind of what I've seen,
is the only times when elephants really get aggressive with one another.
But if it gets pretty extreme and these male elephants,
there's a couple of them going through musth,
they will go at it to get the lady.
They will goer each other.
And you know, no one wants to talk about that
because it's everyone wants to think elephants are always getting long.
But sometimes when there's a couple of dudes around that are both super revved up,
they can get in a fight over a lady.
To the death sometimes.
Yeah.
And I think you kind of said it, but males mostly live on their own
and they do form these groups and they do have friendships and bonds with other males,
but they are very frequently found like traveling by themselves,
probably to avoid stuff like that.
But if you're bummed out by the fact that elephants will kill other elephants
to have access to females, you can take heart in that elephants aren't territorial at all.
They don't have territory.
And when different groups of elephants, whether it's males and groups of females
or different groups of the same sex or whatever,
you just have a bunch of different groups of elephants coming together in the same place,
they basically have a party, a jamboree.
They do.
Like if it's a body of water or a place where there's a lot of fruit or some reason
for a bunch of elephants who don't know one another get together,
it's not only a party, but at that party, you can have like Shirley's in,
who is it?
Jenny's.
And Jenny's going, oh my god, I haven't seen you in 12 years.
Yeah.
What are you up to?
Is that your little baby?
It's the sweetest thing.
Yeah, like they get really excited when they see old friends.
They'll do like pirouettes.
Yeah.
Pea poop.
Sometimes they pee and poop out of excitement to see one another.
This is adorable.
Yeah.
And as kind of lone wolf as the males can be, the females are really,
this is when you really like get the heartworm going.
Heartworm?
Heartworm.
Not heartworm.
It'll give you heartworm thinking about it.
This is when it can warm your heart because females,
they lived very much in organized, in an organized way, they live in family groups.
There are mothers, sometimes three generations all together,
and their little pups, and their aunts, and their moms and grandmas.
There might be up to 30 of them together with all their kids.
And they're all led, which is usually the oldest one, but not always,
but they're led by a matriarch.
And the matriarch is the one that's like, let's go this way.
Not because I just am older and smarter, but I actually have experience
that I can remember that will help lead us to safety.
Yeah, which is pretty spectacular.
It's another thing that's remarkable about elephants,
is that the matriarchs lead by experience.
There was this drought in Tanzania in 1993,
and the different herds led by matriarchs,
they were old enough to remember the last drought back in like 1958 to 1961.
The ones that had lived through that before as younger elephants,
they remembered how the herds survived.
And so their herd was likelier to survive that drought
than herds that were led by younger matriarchs
that hadn't lived through that previous drought.
So they remember this stuff, and they lead their herds based on this past experience
and the wisdom that they gained from it.
Let's just say it, from wisdom, they lead by wisdom.
They do, and some matriarchs are very confident.
They are very, some are very vigilant though,
and a little more nervous.
It kind of depends on who your matriarch is.
Some are very maternal, and when they send the signal for everyone to go,
they're like, well, let's wait, because Janice's little pup is still bathing.
So let's all hang out.
All around. Then some of them are more like,
no, no, no, come on, get out of the water.
We're going. We're leaving now.
Come on, Janice.
I'm going with or without you.
Janice is like, what a bummer.
And then they're together also for a very practical reason.
They help each other out.
They babysit for one another, for God's sake.
I love that.
They babysit for each other, Josh.
I know. The mom can go off and forage for food for her pup
and know that the pup is being watched by some of her herd members.
Her family members is what they're called.
That's right. If a matriarch dies, there's a little short time
where they're like, all right, who's next?
Who's going to step up?
They have ranked choice voting.
How advanced they are.
They're more advanced than every state in the union besides Maine.
Besides Maine.
A lot of times, like we said, it's the oldest remaining female
like she would be next up.
But sometimes it is not.
Sometimes it is the matriarch's daughter.
And she will just assume the position of mom of her mother as matriarch.
Yeah. Kind of like she, like, oh, what is that called?
Where you like become king or queen
because your father or mother was king or queen.
Sure. I can't remember what it's called.
Like your birthright?
Yeah, basically.
That can, that exists in the elephant society
if that elephant happens to be like suited for the job.
And if there's an issue, if there's a dispute
where some elephants are like, actually, I don't think she's ready yet.
I'm not going to follow her.
I'm going to follow Janice.
And Janice will be like far out.
That's it.
Like Janice and the other elephants that want to follow her,
they go off on their own family.
There's no battle.
There's no, there's no fight to the death over dominance.
It's just like, all right, we'll see later.
And then they may see each other later at that clearing
or at that watering hole and be just happy as pie to see one another.
And they may also even travel together,
but just at a much greater distance,
but within communicating distance to like warn one another
and kind of basically keep up the same pace,
but they just keep their distance more.
Yeah, they'll growl at one another.
They'll trumpet.
They'll grunt.
They will stomp their feet.
They will flick their ears.
They will use their trunks.
They will angle their heads and tusks and switch their tails.
These are all communications.
And while they were stomping,
and while they do have those big sturdy feet,
they're also really sensitive.
So if an elephant is just standing still,
it can feel the vibrations in the ground of something far away
or someone calling them from far away.
Through the ground, through their feet.
Like the rumbling through the ground of an elephant growling miles away.
And they also, that trunk, I forgot to mention,
they have a really sensitive sense of smell.
Supposedly they can smell water up to 12 miles away.
Oh, wow.
And that's water.
That has no smell.
Right.
They've been shown to smell storms up to like 150 miles away.
Wow.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Pretty amazing.
I don't know if we've gotten this across or not,
but elephants are pretty amazing.
We do that with all our animal podcasts.
I know.
I love it.
We should do one about like, I don't know,
what's a boring animal that's not so impressive?
Let's see.
Let's see.
They're all great.
Yeah.
I really can't think of a boring animal.
Like there's something fascinating about every animal.
Yeah.
I was going to say frogs, but I was like,
oh no, frogs turned out to be pretty fascinating.
Oh, frogs are the best.
No, elephants are the best.
There's this one researcher that firmly believes
that elephants have a sense of humor.
And she said, she was recalling how they play,
and they would charge her car.
And she thought they were tripping and falling
and tusk the ground, and they kept doing it.
And she was like, no, I know what they're doing now.
They're, they're prat falling.
They are pretending to fall in front of the car
and having a good time doing it.
Yeah.
Like they pretended they were charging her car
on, in the sanctuary.
And we're like, oops.
With them, they'd, they'd trip right before it.
And it happened enough times that she realized
that they were, they were joking.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
It's amazing.
I love it.
I do too.
What else?
Well, this is, you know, the saddest thing
because everyone knows that elephants mourn.
We've all seen the videos and it is true.
And I think in our grief episode,
I told the story of Domini, the elephant,
who basically died of a broken heart from grief.
Don't retell that story.
But they very famously grieve.
There will be extended mourning periods
for groups of elephants.
There are grieving rituals over corpses.
And they also suffer PTSD if they witness violence.
So if they see a poacher kill and detusk an elephant,
they will have literal PTSD and stress symptoms.
So one thing I saw, it was like that PTSD is tough
to compare it to human PTSD,
but that there are like real pronounced effects on them,
usually related to stress, but also apparently related to
not having been brought up in their society.
So that when they, when they like,
when say like an orphan that survives a culling
and is raised like outside of elephant society,
it's just not quite right when you compare it to an elephant
that was raised by elephants, you know,
throughout its two maturity.
And that they frequently call it things like PTSD
or things like that.
But it's like, it's almost its own thing.
Right. But again, if you did that to a deer or a bird or something,
it's not going to have that same effect.
Right. It's not, I hate to say it,
but it doesn't appear to be smart enough to suffer
psychological damage.
Maybe that's good.
From a traumatic experience.
Yeah. I mean, don't feel sorry for the deer.
Deer's probably quite glad.
You should still feel sorry for the deer for what we do to deer.
No, well, yeah, that's a whole other story
about these little things that go in the front of my car
that supposedly keep deer away, but I don't know if they work.
I've seen them, the giant hands that clap and say,
out of the way, deer.
I don't even know how this thing works.
And it very well may not work at all.
But the way I put it to Emily, I was like,
unless these actually attract deer,
then it's worth like the $5 that it cost.
Just give it a shot.
Do you remember those hats that had a cord that would clap?
Do you remember that?
Sure.
My dad had one of those.
Did he really?
Yeah.
Oh man.
Did he ever have the hat with the two beers on both sides?
He wasn't quite cool enough for that one.
But he was cool enough for the clapping hat.
Okay.
I think that's the opposite of cool, actually.
I think so too, the herbal Elvis.
So we mentioned before about how to interact with elephants.
And the only way that we found to interact with elephants ethically
is if you go on an ethical safari and observe them from afar through your binoculars.
Or if you're in the car and you can see them, great.
But if you see something that's advertised as an elephant sanctuary.
Say something.
Yeah, I mean sanctuary, there's no law that dictates when you can use that word.
And when travelers hear that word, they think, oh well this means this is where elephants go to
be taken care of because it's a sanctuary.
I see it's right there on the sign.
Right.
It's not necessarily what that means.
That elephant that you ride or bathe in the pool with may have been headed spirit crushed
by being kept in that tiny pen and starved and beaten for weeks at a time.
This founder of the UK group called Action for Elephants UK, Maria Mossman.
She basically says any place that advertises unnatural behavior, just stay away from.
Yeah.
Because elephants shouldn't be doing tricks for humans.
Right.
And that includes bathing with the elephants, which does sound awesome.
And elephants do bathe and they love to swim and frolic.
But the big problem with that is that in a sanctuary where that's how you get the people to come,
that means you have to keep the elephant in the water all day and let people climb all over it
all day.
That's just genuinely unnatural.
It's unnatural for a human to ride an elephant.
Like you just, it's really easy to step back once you think in the broad term of unnatural behavior.
All of this, all of it starts to become quite clear what you should and shouldn't do with
an elephant or participate in with an elephant and instead just let it do its elephant thing
and observe it from afar and appreciate it from afar.
Yeah.
I saw a video the other day though of a black lab that was best friends with an elephant.
I didn't see that one.
You know, just, I don't know the background of this elephant, but this black lab was
climbing all over it and jumping off in the water and they looked like they were having a good time.
It's unnatural.
That dog should be punished for doing that.
It was unnatural, but it wasn't a human.
It was a dog.
Labs, they're great.
They're pretty great too.
As far as their threats, obviously all three species are in decline.
It's super sad.
Their range, which is a great range like you're talking about, has been encumbered upon by
humans for centuries and thousands of years even.
They just don't have as much room thanks to people and deforestation and fences and roads
and oil pipelines and things.
And then there's the poaching problem of killing elephants for their tusks and now their skin.
That's a new thing.
It's just horrific to think about.
Yeah, brand new.
As of like 2013, some, I believe a Chinese entrepreneur said, hey, you know, it'd be
cool as if I started a trend for beads jewelry made out of elephant skin.
Let me do that.
And now all of a sudden the number of elephants that are killed for their skin jumped in Burma
just over the border from China from 10 a year in 2012 to 61 in 2016.
And their skin had already been used in traditional Chinese medicine to cure gastritis and ulcers
and regrow skin allegedly, which accounts for that 10 in 2012.
But apparently the jewelry really caused this jump over the last few years.
Yeah, China looks like they have granted licenses to import at least 35 elephants
for skinning over the last couple of years.
So that's just awful.
It really is.
What a great way to end the show.
Yeah.
And there's, I mean, they're not endangered from what I understand.
I think they're listed as vulnerable by the World Wildlife Foundation,
but they, their numbers have gone down dramatically.
In 1930, there were 10 million wild elephants in Africa.
Wow.
There's 415,000 today.
Geez.
And just in a decade, I believe in the 2000s, they dropped by 111,000 in just one decade.
Wow.
And in some places, I mean, most of it's poaching.
Some countries still have, like it's legal to trade in ivory, South Africa, Zimbabwe,
Botswana, Namibia, and Eswatini, which you may know and love formally as Swaziland.
It's legal to trade in elephant ivory.
In the US, the UK, Japan, and Thailand, it's legal to trade an antique elephant ivory
that was, you know, brought into market before they started, they enacted laws against it.
But that's, that's pretty much the biggest threat.
And then also, like you said, their habitat encroachment.
Like if you build a pipeline, the elephants just don't step over pipelines.
They're like, oh, okay, well, our range just got cut in half.
And again, their range is enormous.
Like an African bush elephant, their home range is like two, almost 3 million acres.
They'll walk hundreds of acres in a single day.
So, I mean, even keeping one in the zoo, even if you're keeping it alive,
even if you keep it alive for a while, like you're really robbing it of its experience.
Even in a large sanctuary, you're still robbing it of a lot of its experience too.
It's basically like we need to preserve and sustain their home ranges.
It's really the best way to keep them around.
Yeah, it's like the whale shark.
It's like you're used to the ocean.
How about this large pool?
Exactly.
We got a real problem with that.
That's another episode we did, our zoo's good or bad for animals.
Yeah, man, that was a good one.
I got one last thing.
Which got?
So you remember that thing that went around?
It was like on Twitter for a while.
It was elephants see humans and think we're cute the way that we see puppies and think they're cute.
No, I don't remember that.
Oh, it was huge, massive, totally made up.
All right.
Well, I'm glad I didn't see it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, I guess that's it.
Thanks for bursting that bubble.
I couldn't just let that stand.
No, of course not.
So, yeah, there's a good Snopes article about that.
It's worth checking out, but that doesn't mean that they don't actually think we're cute.
It's just never been proven.
How about that?
If you want to know more about elephants, go learn more about elephants.
They're definitely worse things you could do with your time.
And since I said that, it's listener mail time.
I'm going to call this a bit of a mea culpa on our Central Park episode when we spoke about Robert Moses.
Oh, yeah.
I don't remember like saying this guy was the best thing ever or anything,
but there was a darker history there that we did not know about, and we'd like to correct that.
Yes.
We heard from a few people.
And this is from Joe Kennedy.
He said, if you do some deeper research on Robert Moses,
you'll discover the troubling and true effect he had and continues to have
on the racial and socioeconomic segregation entrenched in our cities.
I won't flood your email with a book-length argument,
but many books and papers have been written on the topic.
Many of the mentioning Robert Moses specifically,
I would ask that you take a deeper dive into this particular character,
if nothing else, and for your own opinions and views of his effect
on our country and racial tensions that persist throughout.
I've never written into a podcast or a radio show or website of any kind, really.
But I thought this is important to point out because it's all too common
that people who have committed heinously racist and hateful acts in this history of our country
are excused on the basis of being a product of their times,
or having done good elsewhere, or whatever other excuse is propped up to protect their character.
And listen, guys, I've listened to enough of your shows to know
that you are smart guys with broad, educated worldviews
and seem like you are morally good people.
So I'm not suggesting anything other than a little more research on this specific character,
just so you know for yourselves.
Thanks for the show, guys, and your endless hours of entertainment and education.
I truly enjoy them.
That is Joe Kennedy.
And we heard from other people,
but we appreciate you bringing that to light for sure.
Yeah, thanks, Joe.
Appreciate it.
And everybody who wrote in to say, he's actually a villain.
Yeah.
Yeah, we just, and actually I'd heard about him before separately.
I didn't connect the two and realize that that was the same guy.
Yeah.
We dropped the ball, Chuck.
Yeah, we'll try and do better, everybody.
Okay.
Well, if you want to get in touch with us to tell us how we can do better,
we always love to improve.
So do that.
Do it nicely, but do it.
All right.
You can go on to our website, stuffyoushouldknow.com
and check out our social links there.
And you can send us an email to stuffpodcastathowstuffworks.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
What would you do if a secret cabal of the most powerful folks in the United States told you,
hey, let's start a coup.
Back in the 1930s, a Marine named Smedley Butler was all that stood between the U.S.
and fascism.
I'm Ben Bullitt.
I'm Alex French.
And I'm Smedley Butler.
Join us for this sordid tale of ambition, treason, and what happens when evil tycoons
have too much time on their hands.
Listen to Let's Start a Coup on the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcast or wherever you find your favorite shows.
MySpace was the first major social media company.
They made the internet feel like a nightclub.
And it was the first major social media company to collapse.
My name is Joanne McNeil.
On my new podcast, Main Accounts, the story of MySpace,
I'm revisiting the early days of social media through the people who lived it.
Listen to Main Accounts, the story of MySpace on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you find your favorite shows.
I'm Dr. Romany, and I am back with season two of my podcast,
Navigating Narcissism.
This season, we dive deeper into highlighting red flags and spotting a narcissist before
they spot you.
Each week, you'll hear stories from survivors who have navigated through toxic relationships,
gaslighting, love bombing, and their process of healing.
Listen to Navigating Narcissism on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.