Can elephants smell water?

Water is a vital resource for mammals. This is especially true for African elephants that generally drink every day but can go two to three days between drinks. As they have an exceptional sense of smell, it has been suggested that elephants may locate water using olfactory cues. However, there is no evidence to support this claim.

To explore this, Matthew Wood, Simon Chamaillé-Jammes, Almuth Hammerbacher, and Adrian Shrader (Department of Zoology and Entomology, Mammal Research Institute, and FABI) performed olfactory choice experiments with semi-tame elephants (Wood et al. 2021).

They first tested whether elephants could locate water via smell between two covered buckets (one with and one without water) that had holes drilled in their lids. The water in the experiments came from two natural dams and a drinking trough utilised by the elephants. They used distilled water as a control.

The elephants could locate the water from the study site, but not the distilled water. Having determined that the elephants could detect water olfactorily, they then explored whether they could detect three volatile organic compounds (VOCs) commonly associated with water (geosmin, 2-methylisoborneol, and dimethyl sulphide). Humans can detect all three of these VOCs at very low concentrations, but it was unclear whether elephants could.

The researchers found that the elephants could detect these VOCs but that these VOCs were not in the odours given off by the water sources from the study site. This suggests that the elephants were either able to recognise the two dams and trough's unique odours or associated other VOCs with water.

Ultimately, the results indicate that elephants can locate water via smell at small spatial scales. Still, the extent to which they, and other mammals, can detect water olfactorily over larger distances remains unclear.

Reference:

Wood, M., Chamaillé-Jammes, S., Hammerbacher, A. and Shrader, A.M. (In press). African elephants can detect water via olfactory cues. Animal Cognition

Matthew Wood, Simon Chamaillé-Jammes, Almuth Hammerbacher, and Adrian Shrader

December 16, 2021

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