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An Asian Elephant stands in front of
mirrors at the Bronx Zoo in New York in this undated handout photo.
Elephants can recognize themselves in a mirror -- an important test of
awareness that puts them in an exclusive club with humans, chimpanzees and
dolphins.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery
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BEIJING, Nov. 1 (Xinhuanet) -- Humans, chimpanzees
and dolphins were believed to be the only animals capable of recognizing
themselves in a mirror, but now a recent study showed elephants also have
this ability.
Researchers set up a cumbersome experiment at the
Bronx Zoo in New York, spending weeks to install a huge mirror, 2.4 meters
high and 2.4 meters wide in the pen of three female Asian elephants.
"Maxine, Patty and Happy (the elephants' names)
immediately went over to the mirror when they were let out, which was really a
surprise to us because most animals, when exposed to a mirror, act immediately
as if it were another animal," said Josh Plotnik, a graduate student who worked
on the study.
The elephants used the mirror to inspect themselves,
moving their trunks to look inside their mouths, and tested the mirrored images
by making repetitive, rhythmic movements.
Happy, a 34-year-old elephant, even passed an
important test of self-recognition, known as the "mark test."
Each elephant was marked with visible paint on its
forehead, and Happy repeatedly used the tip of her trunk to touch the mark. That
response required an understanding that the mark was not on the mirror but the
elephant's body, the researcher said.
An invisible "sham" mark was also placed on each
elephant, to see if the feel or smell of the mark might cause him or her to
touch that spot. Happy only touched the visible mark with her trunk.
The other two did not, but the researchers were not
surprised.
"As a result of this study, the elephant now joins a
cognitive elite among animals commensurate with its well-known complex social
life and high level of intelligence," said Frans de Waal, one of the authors of
the study.
The researchers hope other animal experts will try to
replicate their findings with animals and other species.
(Agencies)
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Undated video footage taken by a camera
inside a mirror shows 'Happy', an Asian elephant at the Bronx Zoo in New
York, touching a mark on her head. Elephants can recognize themselves in a
mirror -- an important test of awareness that puts them in an exclusive
club with humans, chimpanzees and dolphins, scientists reported on October
31, 2006.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery
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