CSU professor’s research helps reunite elephant calf with her family
Published: May 19, 2026 2:40 PM
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Jayme DeLoss
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The 4-month-old orphaned elephant calf was disoriented from a bumpy truck ride and didn’t immediately move toward the other elephants. Earlier that day, she had wandered into a tourist camp in northern Kenya, where well-meaning campsite staff had tied her to a tree and called a research team led by Colorado State University Professor George Wittemyer, who has studied elephants in the region for nearly 30 years.
After an intensive search of Samburu National Reserve to identify the family missing a calf, Wittemyer and his team delivered her to the herd they were almost certain was her family.
Would the family recognize the calf and welcome her back? The researchers waited eagerly to see.
The calf’s aunt, known to the researchers as Adelaide, noticed the baby and came to investigate. Adelaide called to the calf, and the calf called back. The exchange set off a chain reaction. The entire family rumbled, trumpeted and converged on the calf, surrounding her in what Wittemyer described as the greeting ceremony elephants perform after extended separation.