Personality in Asian elephants (Elephas maximus): Temporal stability and methods of assessment

Personality is the essence of individuality in animals, affecting individual behaviours, perceptions and lived experiences. Being able to reliably assess personality in animals holds the key to understanding individual differences, and application of this knowledge is paramount in the provision of i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality and individual differences 2025-01, Vol.232, p.112851, Article 112851
Hauptverfasser: Rutherford, Lucy, Murray, Lindsay, Holmes, Lisa, Williams, Ellen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Personality is the essence of individuality in animals, affecting individual behaviours, perceptions and lived experiences. Being able to reliably assess personality in animals holds the key to understanding individual differences, and application of this knowledge is paramount in the provision of individual-level management of animals to optimise welfare. A key aspect of the definition of animal personality is ‘consistency over time’. Yet, despite the range of studies assessing elephant personality, there is a lack of consistency within methodologies and personality is usually assessed at a single point in time. Here, we examine personality data from adult members of the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) herd at Chester Zoo at five separate time points, across a ten-year period (2013−2023). Data were analysed in terms of the instruments used to measure personality (differences in questions/items across assessments, presentation of the personality assessments, raters), and changes over time in elephant personality assessment scores. Select personality traits were consistent over multiple time points. Inter-rater reliability across personality adjectives is highest when keepers are involved in scale development, reinforcing the importance of collaboration between scientists and animal caregivers in building tools for evidence-based management decisions over the lifetime of animals. •This study reports personality ratings in a related herd of elephants over 10 years.•Items: Active, Aggressive, Calm, Confident, Sociable and Dominant were consistent.•Components: Active/Playful; Leadership; Social; Gentle were consistent over time.•The type of scale used influenced the reliability of items rated.•The acquaintanceship length of raters did not influence the reliability of ratings.
ISSN:0191-8869
DOI:10.1016/j.paid.2024.112851