From an article by Charles Siebert, originally published in the NYT, October 8 2006:
In ‘‘Elephant Breakdown,’’ a 2005 essay in the journal Nature, Gay Bradshaw and several colleagues argued that today’s elephant populations are suffering from a form of chronic stress, a kind of species-wide trauma. Decades of poaching and culling and habitat loss, they claim, have so disrupted the intricate web of familial and societal relations by which young elephants have traditionally been raised in the wild, and by which established elephant herds are governed, that what we are now witnessing is nothing less than a precipitous collapse of elephant culture.
[...]
What Bradshaw and her colleagues describe would seem to be an extreme form of anthropocentric conjecture if the evidence that they’ve compiled from various elephant resesarchers, even on the strictly observational level, weren’t so compelling. The elephants of decimated herds, especially orphans who’ve watched the death of their parents and elders from poaching and culling, exhibit behavior typically associated with post-traumatic stress disorder and other trauma-related
disorders in humans: abnormal startle response, unpredictable asocial behavior, inattentive mothering and hyperaggression. Studies of the various assaults on the rhinos in South Africa, meanwhile, have determined that the perpetrators were in all cases adolescent males that had witnessed their families being shot down in cullings. It was common for these elephants to have been tethered to the bodies of their dead and dying relatives until they could be rounded up for translocation to, as Bradshaw and Schore describe them, ‘‘locales lacking traditional social hierarchy of older bulls and intact natal family structures.’’
excellent post
ReplyDeleteThanks. (It was really just a re-post and a link, of course.) The effects of abuse on children and other animals are so obvious and so widespread and so catastrophic that they have to be very studiously ignored. See also Jeffrey Masson's still under-recognised "The Assault on Truth: Freud's Suppression of the Seduction Theory":
ReplyDeletehttp://www.amazon.co.uk/Assault-Truth-Suppression-Seduction-Theory/dp/0345452798