Animal Love
Do Animals Love One Another?"

February
14, 2006—Nam Choke, an eight-year-old male Asian elephant (left), and
Boonrawd, a seven-year-old female, form a heart shape with their trunks
at an elephant camp in Ayutthaya, Thailand, on February 12.
Like
others in the camp, the elephants are domesticated and may perform
chores such as giving rides to tourists. But even in the wild,
creatures are often seen making displays of what look like pure animal
affection.
Female
gorillas, for example, cradle their young in their arms as human
mothers do. Cranes engage in courtship rituals so elegant that
scientists call them dances. And lots of animals, from coyotes to
common pigeons, mate for life. But do animals really love each other?
Most scientists agree that creatures of all kinds share bonds of trust, companionship, and intimacy.
But whether there's love in the wild heart is something that may never be measured.
"Love
is almost impossible to prove," says Victoria Horner, animal
behaviorist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, in National
Geographic Kids magazine. —Blake de Pastino
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/02/0214_060214_animal_love.html

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