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5 - Musth, Reproduction, Social Integration and Stereotypy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2012

Fred Kurt
Affiliation:
Member, European Elephant Group
Marion E. Garai
Affiliation:
Member, European Elephant Group
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Summary

Musth Bulls

Both the Asian and African elephants possess a skin gland in their temples, just above the cheekbone between the eye and external ear opening. This temporal gland is periodically active in males and females. In female Asian elephants temporal gland is active for a very short period of a few hours during mating and during parturition (Kurt, 1992). In adult Asian elephant bulls, musth is considered as a period during which testes and temporal gland are extremely enlarged (Chandrasekharan et al., 1992), testosterone level highly raised (e.g. Jainudeen et al., 1972; Cooper et al., 1990; Lincoln and Ratnasooriya, 1996), and sexual behaviour including regular masturbations, olfactory marking and aggression towards other bulls very pronounced (e.g. Kurt, 1974, 1992, 1995; Rasmussen and Schulte, 1998). The physiological changes during musth include blood acidosis, increased lipid catalysis and fluctuating, often greatly elevated serum, androgen and ketone concentrations. These alterations are characterised in the changed chemical compositions of breath, urine and secretions from the temporal gland (Rasmussen & Krishnamurthy, 2002). The chemical composition continually changes throughout the musth period. Musth is progressively assessed by increased amount of foul smelling, 2 nonanone. In young bulls the first musth periods are characterized by sporadic episodes of aggressive behaviour and fluctuating levels of serum testosterone and dihydrotestosterone, and the secretion of their temporal gland is composed of sweet smelling alcohols, ketones and esters (Rasmussen & Riddle, 2002).

Type
Chapter
Information
The Asian Elephant in Captivity
A Field Study
, pp. 154 - 212
Publisher: Foundation Books
Print publication year: 2006

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