Tiger Sounds May Ward Off Pilfering Elephants

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This is Scientific American 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber. This'll just take a minute.
The thieves arrive under cover of darkness, to steal crops.
Farmers try to ward off the raiders with drums, firecrackers, electrified fences, even poison.
The conflict kills hundreds of people annually.
And hundreds of the thieves also die.
But hungry elephants keep returning to pilfer cropland at night in India.
Now farmers may have an effective new tool: a tiger growl.
Researchers recorded tiger and leopard sounds in a Bangalore zoo.
Then they set up playback systems in southern Indian villages near two wildlife refuges, an area known for elephant crop raids.
For six months, when marauding elephants attempted to raid a field, they might have triggered the tiger recording or this one of a leopard.
When the elephants heard the leopard, they trumpeted and loitered for a while.
But when they heard the tiger, which is known to kill baby elephants, they backed off quickly and quietly.
The report is in the journal Biology Letters.
Should the tiger sounds work, and save crops, people and pachyderms, farmers may say "They're great!"
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber.

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