Rampant environmental change and forest destruction push elephants, both
Asian and African, to explore human spaces to fulfil their dietary and
ecological requirements. Many ‘novel’ elephant behaviour in sharing
spaces come to the limelight. Elephant calf burial is reported in
African literature but remains absent from the Asian context. We
concretely report calf burials by Asian elephants in the eastern
Himalayan floodplains of the north Bengal landscape. The study area
consists of fragmented forests, tea gardens, agricultural lands, and
defence establishments, among others. Tea gardens form the majority of
elephant corridors, and we explain the burial strategy of elephants in
the trenches of tea gardens. We present four case reports of calf
burials by elephants. We aimed to understand the perimortem strategy and
postmortem behaviour of Asian elephants. The major findings reflect that
the carcasses were carried through trunks and legs for a distance before
burying in a ‘legs-upright-position’. We further investigated the
underlying reason for calf deaths through postmortem examinations.
Direct human intervention was not recorded in any of the four deaths.
Through opportunistic observation, digital photography and fieldnotes,
and postmortem examination report, we suggest that the carcasses were
buried in an abnormal recumbent style irrespective of the reason for
calf deaths. Through long-term observation, we further report that the
elephants in this region clearly avoid the paths where carcasses were
buried, attributing to “bad milestones” and “bad omens”. We discuss
and connect the literature of two distinct elephant species and also
compared thanatological studies of other sentient nonhuman species.
Keywords: Thanatology, animal behaviour, Asian elephant, calf burial,
eastern Himalayas, tea gardens