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May 20, 2025

Asian elephants have larger brains than their African relatives, researchers discover

Elephant brain size differs between species and sexes and shows a comparatively large postnatal increase. A) Top view of the brain of a 44-y-old Asian female elephant, Dumba. B) Top view of the brain of a 35-y-old African female elephant, Indra. C) Top view of the brain of an ∼28-y-old feral African male elephant; aging was performed according to tooth abrasion patterns. D) Top view of the brain of a newborn African male elephant. Credit: PNAS Nexus (2025). DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgaf141
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Elephant brain size differs between species and sexes and shows a comparatively large postnatal increase. A) Top view of the brain of a 44-y-old Asian female elephant, Dumba. B) Top view of the brain of a 35-y-old African female elephant, Indra. C) Top view of the brain of an ∼28-y-old feral African male elephant; aging was performed according to tooth abrasion patterns. D) Top view of the brain of a newborn African male elephant. Credit: PNAS Nexus (2025). DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgaf141

African elephants are the largest land animals on Earth and significantly larger than their relatives in Asia, from which they are separated by millions of years of evolution. Nevertheless, Asian elephants have a 20% heavier brain, as scientists from Humboldt-University of Berlin and the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) were able to demonstrate together with international colleagues. They also showed that elephant brains triple in weight after birth.

These results, in the journal PNAS Nexus, provide potential explanations for behavioral differences between African and Asian elephants as well as for the pachyderms' long youth, during which they gain enormous experience and learn social skills.

Elephants are among the best-known and most iconic animal families and are considered to be exceptionally social and intelligent—yet surprisingly little is known about their brains. An international research team led by Malav Shah and Michael Brecht from the Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience at Humboldt-University of Berlin (BCCN) and Thomas Hildebrandt from the Leibniz-IZW has now analyzed the weight and structure of the brains of Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) and African elephants (Loxodonta africana) based on dissections of wild and zoo animals as well as on literature data and MRI scans.

They showed that externally visible differences—Asian elephants are smaller, have relatively smaller ears, only one "trunk finger" and most of the females have no tusks—and some of the associated behavioral differences extend to the inside of their huge skulls: Adult female Asian elephants have significantly heavier brains, weighing a good 5,300 grams on average, than their African counterparts, which average just over 4,400 grams.

This finding could not be conclusively confirmed for male elephants (which have significantly heavier brains in both species) owing to the limited data available on Asian elephants. However, the cerebellum is proportionally heavier in African elephants (a good 22% of the total brain weight) than in Asian elephants (a good 19%).

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Elephant brains grow almost as much as human brains after birth

The scientists were also able to show that elephants exhibit very large postnatal brain growth. The brains of adult elephants are about three times as heavy as they were at birth. This means that elephants have a significantly higher lifetime brain growth than all primates—with the exception of humans, in which the brain at birth weighs only around a fifth of its final weight.

The fact that these findings on the size of elephant brains are new is explained by the challenging acquisition of the objects of investigation: Extracting elephant brains from the skulls of deceased animals is a complex and very rarely performed veterinary procedure.

For the present study, 19 brains were analyzed that were extracted at the Leibniz-IZW from deceased zoo animals or animals euthanized for animal welfare reasons (14) or obtained from dissections of wild elephants that had died (5), including in Kruger National Park in South Africa. In addition, the scientists were able to include data on six additional brains from an earlier study by another research team in their analysis.

Brain size as a possible explanation for differences in behavior and motor skills?

"The difference in brain weight is perhaps the most important difference between these two elephant species," says Malav Shah from the BCCN, first author of the paper. "It could explain important behavioral differences between Asian and African elephants." For example, both species show very different behavior when interacting with humans.

Asian elephants have been partially domesticated over thousands of years and are used as work animals in different cultures and regions. In the case of African elephants, there are only very few cases in which domestication was even partially successful. It is much more difficult to habituate African elephants to human company than Asian elephants.

The fact that their brains grow so much over the course of an elephant's life seems plausible to the study heads, Michael Brecht and Thomas Hildebrandt. "Social factors and learning processes could explain the strong brain growth after birth, as elephants live in complex social structures and have an outstanding memory. The experience and accumulated knowledge of adult elephants, especially matriarchs, is central to the group behavior of elephants and the young animals are very closely cared for over a long period of childhood and adolescence."

The fact that the cerebellum is larger in African elephants relative to the animals' overall size could be related to the more complex motor function of the trunk in this species. With their two trunk fingers, African elephants can perform more diverse movements, which is also reflected in a higher number of neurons in the trunk's control center in the brain.

Brecht and Hildebrandt point to the many unanswered questions in researching the brains of Asian and African elephants and their significance for motor skills and social behavior. They will continue their intensive research into these fascinating, intelligent animals and their "control centers."

More information: Malav Shah et al, Larger brains and relatively smaller cerebella in Asian elephants compared with African savanna elephants, PNAS Nexus (2025).

Journal information: PNAS Nexus

Provided by Leibniz-Institut für Zoo- und Wildtierforschung (IZW) im Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V.

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Asian elephants possess brains approximately 20% heavier than those of African elephants, averaging 5,300 g versus 4,400 g in adult females. Elephant brains triple in weight after birth, a growth pattern surpassed only by humans among primates. African elephants have a proportionally larger cerebellum, potentially linked to more complex trunk motor skills. These anatomical differences may underlie behavioral distinctions between the species.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.