Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

The Mystery Of The Smoking Elephant Has Been Solved

IANS, 30 Mar, 2018 02:15 PM
    The puzzling image of a wild elephant seemingly enjoying a quiet smoke in a video that has gone viral may have a simple explanation for its odd behaviour.
     
     
    Varun R Goswami, elephant biologist and senior scientist with the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), India Program, said that in all probability, the elephant was trying to ingest wood charcoal, as she appeared to be picking up something from the burnt forest floor, blowing the ash away that came along with it in her trunk and consuming the rest.
     
     
    Charcoal has well recognised toxin-binding properties which attract wild animals, a WCS statement added.
     
     
    It can also serve as a laxative, thereby doubling its utility for animals that consume it after forest fires, lightning strikes or controlled burns, it said.
     
     
     
    The video was shot by Vinay Kumar, assistant director, WCS India Program, in the Nagarhole National Park in Karnataka in April 2016 when a WCS team was involved in a project monitoring tiger and prey.
     
     
    Kumar said that though he felt there was something unique about the elephant and the smoke when he was shooting the video, he forgot about the episode later.
     
     
    Recently while checking his records, he stumbled upon the video again: "I discussed it with Goswami, and it was then decided that we would release it."
     
     
    The video has been shared on social media sites and the elephant's behaviour debated at length across international agencies and publications in recent days.
     
     
    This is the first known video-documentation of a wild elephant exhibiting such behaviour, and thus had scientists and experts puzzled, a WCS statement said, adding that it provides new insights into the behaviour of wild elephants.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Britain's Manchester Museum To Launch Permanent South Asia Gallery In 2020

    Britain's Manchester Museum To Launch Permanent South Asia Gallery In 2020
    The 350 square metre gallery will come up at the museum (part of the University of Manchester) in collaboration with the British Museum, he said.

    Britain's Manchester Museum To Launch Permanent South Asia Gallery In 2020

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid
    Its format is rather unique: part fiction, part history and part travelogue. Pakistani author Haroon Khalid says his third book, "Walking With Nanak", is a "conscious attempt to humanise the saint" and could be the first work of its kind in the country.

    Walking With Nanak' Conscious Attempt To Humanise The Saint: Author Haroon Khalid

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP
    A Mexican teen has more than one million people who say they'll attend her 15th birthday party - thanks to her father's invite, which has gone viral on Facebook. 

    WATCH: Mexican Party Invitation Goes Viral, 1.2 Million People RSVP

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year
    Time magazine on Wednesday named President-elect Donald Trump its Person of the Year.

    US President-Elect Donald Trump Declared TIME Person Of The Year

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart
    Roy and Dorothy Vardy have been separated since June after Dorothy — who turns 91 this month — spent five weeks in hospital.

    Elderly Newfoundland Couple Separated After 68 Years Of Marriage, Face First Christmas Apart

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu
    Prehistoric ancestors ate a rich variety of plant-based foods during the Stone Age, say scientists who discovered a collection of 780,000-year-old edible plants in Israel.

    Stone Age Humans Enjoyed Diverse Plant-based Menu