ElephantVoices
Donate
  • The Elephant EthogramDiscover elephant behavior in the world’s largest video and sound library
  • Elephant CognitionElephant proverbial memory, intelligence, social learning and complex brains
  • Elephant CommunicationElephant acoustic, visual, tactile and chemical communication
  • Elephant Studies & FieldworkOur field studies in Amboseli, Maasai Mara & Gorongosa & how to ID elephants
  • Elephant Social BehaviorElephant personalities, social networks, male journeys, longevity, societies & culture
  • Elephant ConservationProtecting elephants, promoting coexistence, ending ivory poaching, trophy hunting & captivity
  • Resources
  • News & Views
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Donate

Menu

Elephant Studies & FieldworkElephant ConservationElephant CommunicationElephant CognitionElephant Social BehaviorResourcesThe Elephant EthogramHelp elephantsNews & ViewsAbout Us

Follow us

InstagramFacebookLinkedInVimeoYouTubeSoundCloud

General

DonatePrivacy Policy Contact UsSitemap

Copyright © 2026 ElephantVoices. All Rights Reserved.
ElephantVoices works globally for elephants - registered as a 501(c)(3) charity in California, USA 

  1. Home
  2. Ethogram
  3. Coprophagia

Explore The Behavior

Make another search

Coprophagia

Using the trunk to Grasp or Pluck and ingest portions of faeces from the fresh dung pile of another elephant.

Media caption

Little E has found a pile of fresh dung and is eating from it - a behavior known as Coprophagia. A 2 year old female comes along and inspects what he is doing and then uses a gentle Push that seems to be intended to stop him from eating the dung and Guide him away from it. We have seen this sort of intervention by older elephants before. (Maasai Mara, Kenya)