Citizen Science

The elephant’s versatile extra limb S. Ananthanarayanan The elephant’s bulk has worked against endo

The tusker’s multitasker trunk
 
The elephant’s versatile extra limb 
S. Ananthanarayanan
The elephant’s bulk has worked against endowing the animal with delicate fingers. But it has a trunk that amply compensates
Paule Dagenais, Sean Hensman, Valérie Haechler and Michel C Milinkovitch, from the University of Geneva, the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, and Adventures with Elephants, in Bela, South Africa, describe in the journal, Current Biology, how the elephant trunk has evolved, as they say in the paper, “to be a spectacular organ for delicate to heavy object manipulation as well as social and sensory functions.” Understanding this evolution could point the way to doing something similar in the laboraatory, the authors say. 

The paper starts out by drawing attention to a specific feature of the elephant trunk. And what is this? It is that the elephant’s trunk is not a limb with a skeleton, like an arm or the fingers of the hand, but consists only of muscles. And these muscles work not by the action of levers, like limbs do, but by hydraulic forces exerted by liquid deformations. This method of working is found in many parts of the animal world.  Instances are the tentacles of the squid or the arms of the octopus. Closer home, this is the way we push food down to the stomach and through the intestines. A familiar organ like this, with has no bones, one that we consciously use, is the tongue. And as the tongue, and the muscles of the mouth, and in the throat, can produce complex speech, or the modulated tones of a trained singer, we can see that muscular control can be more refined than the fingers of a concert pianist, or the limbs of a gymnast.
And so it is with the trunk of the elephant. “It can manipulate a single blade of grass but also carry loads up to 270 kilograms,” say the authors of the paper. The American writer, Herman Melville, in his novel, Moby Dick, in marvelling at the delicacy of touch that the sperm whale has in its tail, was reminded of the elephant. This is what he says: “What tenderness there is in that preliminary touch! Had this tail any prehensile power, I should straightway bethink me of Darmonodes’ elephant that so frequented the flower-market, and with low salutations presented nosegays to damsels, and caressed…”
The elephant’s trunk is a large organ, often over 3 metres long, and it is capable of great manipulation. The paper mentions functions like breathing, smelling, feeling by touch, vocalising, siphoning and spraying water, spraying dust, and handling things, pushing or carrying logs, or using suction to pick up the smallest of objects. The elephant needs to extend the trunk to its full length, to reach a distant object, or to draw in the trunk, and to move things from side to side, the trunk sometimes needs to create a bend, like an elbow, to mimic a skeletal joint.

The human-made, mechanical equivalent may be earth-moving equipment, which have a jib made of many sections. Control of this metal limb, however, needs sophisticated electronics and computing. And yet, the range of movement possible is hardly comparable.  Animal limbs, of course, are capable of more complex movement, but the levers and joints through which these come about finally place limitations. Except that the elephant trunk, which has no bones or joints, enjoys near-infinite flexibility.

Except, again, the paper points out, that this flexibility arises out of a very huge number of muscle fragments and associated nerve signals, which could lead to an overwhelming information load. Hence, as is done in the field of artificial intelligence systems, the paper says, a strategy is required to bring down the complexity of the tasks to be handled. The problem that arises in artificial intelligence is because the task in AI is to keep track of a huge number of factors on which a course of action to be decided may depend. For instance, if the task before the AI system is to guide a car that it is driving down a street, the method is to use a camera which feeds, say, a million pixels to the computer every second. The computer is first ‘trained’, with the camera switched on and the car driven by a human driver. During this process, the computer ‘learns’ to associate pixel-patterns that it ‘sees’ with the kind of action the human driver takes.  After this ‘learning,’ when the computer has to drive on its own, it is able to process the pixels that it ‘sees’ and take the correct driving decisions.  

The trouble with this, and other tasks that AI performs, is that there is a huge information processing load, and not all the information has the same importance. For instance, it is usually the space directly in the path of the moving car, rather than stationary things in the periphery, that are immediately important. In this and other applications, for instance forecasting market trends, it is possible to group many factors, as so called principal components, so that the total number of independent variables to consider is reduced – and hence reduce the complexity. 

In the same way, the authors say, the exceedingly great number of units to be considered when looking at how the elephant is able to control its trunk can be brought down by considering the movements of the trunk as composed of a lesser number of ‘building blocks’ of movement. In order to show that this indeed is the case, the authors analysed the gamut of movements of the elephant trunk, their motivation, their speed, their purpose, and found that there existed a pattern, a method that underlay what the trunk achieved. 
 
The method they employed was to assign specific tasks to two adult, African elephants, and to record their trunk movements with high speed cameras, followed by analysis using special software, software that had been successfully used in motion picture animation. The method, called motion-capture, takes shots of real people or action and then develops animation. The technique, which trades creation of animation on the drawing board for adaptation of the real thing, was used with resounding success in the animated films, Lord of the Rings and Avatar. 
The same method was used to analyse the elements of the trunk movements, and the result was that simple movements, for instance, of extending, bending and twisting, in a variety of tasks, could be broken down to just 17 primary behaviours.   The findings were supplemented by anatomical studies and medical imaging, to demonstrate the relationship between muscle movement economy and the primary units of motion that were discovered.
There is a striking similarity, the paper says, in the method of the elephant trunk and the way the arm of the octopus manages tasks and movements.  As elephants and octopi are separated by a billion years of evolution and rely on widely different nervous systems, it is tempting, the paper says, to consider that the principles of breaking complexity down to primitives are basic to the mechanics and functioning of living things.
[the writer can be contacted at response@simplescience.in]

Citizen Science

Science Advances study – insects and streetlights

Science Advances study – insects and streetlights 

Images at the end show some common native British moths that have been found at the study sites, but not necessarily during this latest study. The authors are awaiting results of DNA barcoding to confirm the ID of the caterpillars found during the study. Feel free to email lead author Douglas Boyes (douglasboyes@gmail.com) for clarification on any images/captions.

1. White LED street lights (along a rural road) at one of the 27 pairs of field sites. The lights also illuminate the adjacent hedgerows and grass margins (both these areas were sampled for the two sets of caterpillars examined in the study). Location: Tackley, Oxfordshire. Image: Douglas Boyes

2. Sampling nocturnal caterpillars in grass margins using a sweep net (under white LED street lights). Location: Golden Balls Roundabout, Oxfordshire. Image: Jacob Jaffe

3. A selection of moth caterpillars caught by sweep netting (mix of several species, family: Noctuidae) during fieldwork. Image: Douglas Boyes

4. LED streetlights at a rural junction. Location: Curbridge, Oxfordshire. Image: Douglas Boyes

5. Our study showed that sodium streetlights, with their characteristic orange hue, are less harmful to insects. Location: Upper Heyford, Oxfordshire. Image: Douglas Boyes

6. Experimental lighting rigs (white LED, in this case) were used to see whether light affects the behaviour of nocturnal caterpillars in grass margins (with no history of lighting). The rigs are 4 meters tall, comparable to streetlights used in residential areas. Location: Little Milton, Oxfordshire. Image: Douglas Boyes

7. Road verges can be fantastic wildlife habitats (especially when not subject to bright lighting). Photo taken during botanical survey of an unlit transect at one of the study sites. Location: Botley, Oxfordshire. Image: Douglas Boyes

8. Standardised monitoring has revealed that the total number of moths has declined steadily by one third over the last 50 years (1968–2017). Pictured are two of the 2,500 moth species found in the UK (Elephant Hawk-moth, L and Small Elephant Hawk-moth, R). Image: Douglas Boyes.

9. Swallow-tailed Moth (Ourapteryx sambucaria) has declined in abundance by almost a half since 1970. Credit: Iain Leach/Butterfly Conservation

10. Pebble Prominent (Notodonta ziczac) caterpillar. This species has suffered a 45% drop in its numbers since the 1970s. Credit: Patrick Clement/Butterfly Conservation

11. Buff Arches (Habrosyne pyritoides) has declined by 62% since the 1970s.Credit: Iain Leach/Butterfly Conservation

12. Canary-shouldered Thorn (Ennomos alniaria) populations have plummeted by two-thirds over the last 50 years. Credit: Iain Leach/Butterfly Conservation

13. Blood-vein (Timandra comae) has declined in abundance by 55% between 1970-2016. Credit: Patrick Clement/Butterfly Conservation

14. Chinese Character (Cilix glaucata). This bird dropping mimic has declined by 41% in Britain. Credit: Iain Leach/Butterfly Conservation

15. The numbers of Burnished Brass (Diachrysia chrysitis) have dropped by 43% since the 1970s. Credit: Iain Leach/Butterfly Conservation

16. Pebble Hook-tip (Drepana falcataria) is now far less frequently seen than in previ

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