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Elephant facts
The elephant is one
of the most interesting and beautiful creatures on earth. It is the
largest animal on land with some bulls growing up to about thirteen
feet tall. They can weigh up to seven tones for the bulls- about the
weight of a truck.
Elephants are
unique in that they smell, eat, and wash themselves using their long
flexible trunks. In addition they have elongated teeth made of ivory
that aid them in getting food. They do use them also to lift heavy
objects including pushing down trees. These teeth are called tusks.
The most obvious
characteristic of elephants, besides their massive size, is their
trunk. The trunk is nothing more than an elongation of their nose
and upper lip. Besides being used for breathing and smelling it is
also used as an appendage, much like an arm or hand. Elephants are
capable of pulling up to 11.5 liters (3 gallons) of water into the
trunk to be sprayed into the mouth for drinking or onto the back for
bathing. They use their two finger-like projections that are at the
tip to manipulate small objects and to pluck grasses.
Elephants eat
grass, small branches, and bark from trees. They especially like
leaves from the top branches. They get the leaves by pushing down
the trees with their large heads and bodies. Then they get the bark
by scraping it with their sharp tusks.
Most elephants live
in the grasslands of Africa and in the forests of Asia. They live in
groups called herds. The herd is typically composed of up to ten
females and their young. All of the females in the herd are
directly related to the matriarch, who is typically the oldest and
largest female. Males beyond the age of maturity are with the herd
only during mating. A herd is a group that may have ten or more
elephants. It is usually led by a female elephant. Herds have been
known to travel ten miles or even farther to look for food and
water. When elephants travel, they walk very quietly in single file.
Young elephants are led by the older elephants with their tails.
They stay close to their mothers at all times. The entire herd will
protect the young ones if there's any sign of danger.
Elephants love
water and are very good swimmers. When they get hot, they swim in
lakes or rivers, or give themselves showers using their long trunks.
An elephant can also cool off by rolling in a shady bed of mud.
Young elephants
stay with their families for many years. It's not unusual for a herd
of elephants to live together all of their lives. They are also
capable of making low frequency sounds that are below the human
range of hearing; this allows wandering individuals within the herd
as well as several different herds to stay in direct contact over
distances of many miles.
Did you know that?
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Elephants stomp when they walk.
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Elephants sleep standing up.
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Sometimes baby elephants lie down to sleep.
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Elephants bathe. Sometimes they spray dirt on
themselves or bathe in mud to get the parasites off.
·
They cool off by fanning their ears. This cools
the blood in their ears. That blood goes to the rest of their body
and cools off the elephant.
·
They poop 80 pounds in one day.
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Elephants weigh about 10,000 pounds. It would
take 250 students to add up to 10,000 pounds.
·
Only grown up ladies and their babies live in the
herds.
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The bull elephants leave the herd when they are
12 years old.
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They fight with their tusks.
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They eat grass and bark.
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During the wet season they eat things low to the
ground.
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During the dry season they use their trunk to
gather food from trees and bushes.
·
They suck up water into their trunks and shoot it
into their mouths.
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Elephants need lots of room to roam and eat.
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They can run 24mph for short distances.
·
Elephants perform greeting ceremonies when a
member of the group returns after a long time away. The welcoming
animals spin around, flap their ears, and trumpet.
·
The blue whale weighs as much as thirty
elephants, and is as long as three greyhound buses.
·
What do bats' wings, elephants' ears, flamingos'
legs, rabbit's ears, goats' horns and human skin all have in common?
They radiate heat to provide cooling.
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Female elephants produce one calf every five
years.
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Genuine ivory does not only come from elephants.
It can come from the tusk of a boar or walrus.
·
Mice, whales, elephants, giraffes, and humans all
have seven neck vertebras.
·
African elephants have larger bodies, bigger
ears, less bumpy foreheads, and longer tusks than Asian elephants.
·
African elephants only have four teeth to chew
their food with. However, each tooth is 12 inches long, and their
tusks are elongated teeth that grow throughout their lives, like
fingernails.
·
At birth an Asian elephant weighs around 440
pounds (200 kilograms) and an African elephant weighs 581 pounds
(264 kilograms). By adulthood both types of elephants will weigh
close to 4 tons.
·
Elephant tusks grow throughout an elephant's life
and can weigh more than 200 pounds. Among Asian elephants, only the
males have tusks. Both sexes of African elephants have tusks.
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Elephants and short tailed shrews get by on only
two hours of sleep a day.
·
Elephants are covered with hair. Although it is
not apparent from a distance, at close range, one can discern a thin
coat of light hairs covering practically every part of an elephant's
body.
·
Elephants communicate in sound waves below the
frequency that humans can hear.
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Elephants have been known to remain standing
after they die.
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Heart and liver: The elephant heart weights
about 22kg and circulates about 450 liters of blood. Inner
"cleaning" is performed by a 77kg liver.
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Water and trunk: To drink its 11 litres of water
at a time, the elephant uses its trunk which weighs about 113kgs.
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Tongue: Helping the swallowing process is a 12kg
elephant tongue.
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Food and intestines: The approximately 250kg food
eaten every day passes through 18m of intestines. Eventually
processed into about 100kg of elephant dung per day.
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Digestion: Elephants only digest about 40% of
what they eat, and therefore, they need to spend two-thirds of every
day eating.
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Gas: An elephant 'releases' 2000 litres of
methane gas per day!
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Skin: Its skin weighs 450-750 kg.
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Tail: The tail weighs about 11 kgs.
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Fighting: The longest recorded fight between two
elephants was recorded at 10 hours and 56 minutes.
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Gestation: An elephant's gestation (conception to
birth) is 23 months.
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Call: It is estimated that an area of fifty
square kilometers is filled with particular elephant "call" in
infrasound. This might increase to about three hundred square
kilometers at dusk due to lower temperatures.
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Eyes: An elephant’s eyes are very small in
relation to its head. The eye contains very few photoreceptors and
they cannot see very well further than a few hundred feet.
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Speed: A herd ambles at about 4 miles per hour
and can charge at more than 25 miles per hour.
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No jumping: Elephants cannot run or jump. They
can however walk very fast and climb.
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Swimming: They can swim considerable distances.
In deep water they hold their trunks above the water like
periscopes.
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Trunk: An elephant’s trunk is the most versatile
of all mammalian creations being used as a nose, arm, hand and
multipurpose tool. It is powerful enough to kill a lion with a
single swipe, yet the finger-like lobes at the end are adept enough
to pluck a feather from the ground.
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Trunk muscles: The trunk is boneless, and is
composed of an estimated 40 000 muscles.
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Tusks: Elephant’s tusks are elongated upper
incisor teeth, which grow continuously throughout the elephant’s
life. They are not always an exact match, as this depends on which
side they favor much like left and right-handed humans.
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Ears: An elephant’s ears are covered with
lots of veins,
which form distinct and unique patterns which can be used to
identify individuals - much like human fingerprints. Elephant's ears
are packed with blood vessels, and when flapped, they quickly lower
the animal’s body temperature. This swiftly circulating blood is
cooled by about 15 degrees Fahrenheit while in the elephant’s ear.
Kenya tour
Tanzania
safaris
Mount Kenya
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