African Elephant

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Flutterby
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Re: African Elephant

Post by Flutterby »

I've seen ellies run! :yes:


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Re: African Elephant

Post by 100ponder »

Go ask all that got trampeled if the ellie just ambled up to them. I can assure you ellies can move !
It is rather out of context for us non-ellie dwellers of the earth to debate it their modus propultion is running as defined by some Phd in his office or not. Ellies sometimes need to move fast regardless of what humans define it to be.
And fast they are. . . . .


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Re: African Elephant

Post by Dindingwe »

Exactly 100ponder, the important thing to know is how fast they can go, and they can be faster than us humans. Whether it is technically running or walking does not change the speed... But it is always good to have a scientific point of view on everything.


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Re: African Elephant

Post by Richprins »

Ja ,Interesting..they can be bleddie fast indeed! :shock:


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Re: African Elephant

Post by Lisbeth »

17 Elephant facts you need to know

Posted: February 19, 2018 - Photos © Derek Keats

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The African elephant (Loxodonta africana) is the largest land mammal in the world and one of nature’s great ecosystem engineers, being a major contributor to maintaining the balance between wooded and grass ecosystems. Their beneficial impact on biodiversity in large unfenced ecosystems and their potentially negative impact on same in fenced environments, make them a key species in Africa.

Here are 17 facts about African elephants that you need to know:

1. There are about 50,000 muscles in an elephant’s trunk, made up of six muscle groups, and no bones. This compares to 639 muscles in the entire human body! The closest thing we have to an elephant’s trunk is our tongue. Elephants use their trunks to breath, drink, eat, smell, snorkel, wrestle, communicate, touch, feel, hold, grab and pull. We can’t think of any other appendage that is so versatile.

2. Elephants cannot jump, gallop or canter. They can only walk at various speeds – from a slow walk to a moderate ‘amble’ and fast shuffling ‘run’ where their stride remains the same but the leg speed increases. Their top speed is about 24 km/hr. For more information read our article, Can elephants run, or do they just walk faster?

3. Elephants are either left or right ‘handed’. They are born not knowing how to use their trunks and learn as they grow. Like humans they show a preference between grasping objects to the left or right. You can tell which side elephants prefer – tusks are shorter on the preferred side (because they get worn down more on that side).

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4. The elephant’s sense of smell is estimated to be four times that of a bloodhound, or 160 times that of a human. They can smell water from many kilometres away.

5. Many tree species rely on elephants to spread their seeds. But that is not all. Many seeds are more likely to germinate having passed through an elephant’s gut. Elephants transport these seeds for many kilometres as they process their food, before depositing them in their dung balls – a vital fertiliser and moisture package for those seeds, and a kick-starter to life.

6. During the dry season elephants provide access to water for other species. They dig holes in dry riverbeds to get to deep water – opening the water up for other species not able to dig. They also enlarge and compact mud wallows to form large pans that fill up with water – again providing water for other species.

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7. Elephants are the heaviest land mammals, at 4 to 7 tons, and the second tallest land mammal (behind the giraffe) at 3,1 to 3,4 metres at the shoulder. The largest elephant on record weighed 10,9 tons and was 3,9 metres at the shoulder.

8. Elephant herds are led by older cows (matriarchs), with young bulls forming their own smaller herds after leaving the breeding herd. Old bulls often roam on their own, or with a few companions (often referred to as askaris), meeting up with breeding herds as cows come into season.

9. Elephants live for 50 to 70 years. Bulls only start contributing to the gene pools at 35 to 40 years old and cows start breeding at 12 to 14 years old. Cows undergo the longest gestation period of all mammals – they are pregnant for 22 months.

10. Bull elephants periodically go into musth, when testosterone levels are up to 60 times higher than normal. Symptoms include unpredictable and aggressive behaviour, urine dripping from the penis, discharge from the temporal glands behind the eyes and a strong odour.

11. Elephants grieve their dead and carry out ritual greetings at old carcasses – covering bodies of deceased elephants in plants and frequently visiting old carcasses to linger, gently touch and pick up bones. They also exhibit signs of post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

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2. Bull elephants have internal testes, much like the rock hyrax – a rodent-like mammal and close relative to the elephant.

13. Elephants can detect seismic signals via their feet, through the leg and shoulder bones and into the middle ear. They communicate with each other over distances up to 10 km via low frequency rumbles, again picked up via the feet.

14. Elephants starve to death once their teeth wear out. They produce six sets of teeth in their lives, with each set pushing forward from the back of the jaw to replace worn teeth at the front. After six such sets elephants run out of teeth, cannot chew food, lose condition and either fall prey to disease or predators or starve to death. Contrasts this with humans, where one set of adult teeth is produced from the top and bottom of the jaw, to replace the original set of baby teeth.

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15. An adult elephant requires up to 300kg of food and 160 litres of water per day.

16. African elephants are listed as CITES I (threatened with extinction) in all African countries except for Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe, where they are listed as CITES II (not necessarily threatened with extinction, but in which trade must be controlled in order to avoid utilisation incompatible with their survival).

17. On average 96 elephants are being poached every day for their ivory – out of an estimated total population of 350,000 savanna elephants. The population of savanna elephants declined by 8% per annum during the years 2007 to 2014. It is estimated that there are only 25 to 30 ‘tuskers’ left (bulls with tusk weight of more than 45 kg on each side), with poachers and trophy hunters threatening the remaining individual elephants. Read more about tuskers in our online magazine featureAfrica’s big tuskers.

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Re: African Elephant

Post by okie »

Friday, 02 March 2018 07:08

Elephant genome study offers a jumbo surprise

Written by: Source and writer on bottom of Article

The most comprehensive elephant genome study ever conducted, covering seven living and extinct species, is offering some surprises about the family tree of the world’s largest land animal while also settling a debate about Africa’s elephants.

Researchers said on Monday that their research confirmed that the two types of African elephants, those inhabiting forests and those roaming savannas, are separate species that have lived in nearly complete isolation from one another for the past half million years despite their close proximity.
They join the Asian elephant as the world’s three existing elephant species.

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The scientists sequenced the genomes of two African savanna elephants, two African forest elephants, two Asian elephants, two extinct so-called straight-tusked elephants, four extinct woolly mammoths, including two from North America and two from Siberia, one extinct Columbian mammoth and two extinct American mastodons. Mastodons are not classified as members of the elephant lineage but are cousins

“I hope that this study can create an appreciation for the rich evolutionary history of elephants and emphasise the need for protecting the only three elephant species that still walk the planet today, who are all under imminent risk of extinction from poaching and habitat loss,” said Harvard Medical School geneticist Eleftheria Palkopoulou, one of the researchers.

The research found multiple instances of gene flow — interbreeding — between different extinct elephant species, though this has virtually stopped among today’s elephants.

The straight-tusked elephants that once inhabited Europe and Asia — the largest of the species studied at up to four metres and 15 tons — are a case in point. The species turns out to be a hybrid with portions of its genome arising from an ancient African elephant, the woolly mammoth and the African forest elephants still alive today.

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Straight-tusked elephants were traditionally thought to be most closely related to Asian elephants due to similarities in their skulls and teeth. One of the two straight-tusked elephants studied lived 120,000 years ago and provided one of the oldest high-quality genomes for any extinct species.

The scientists also found fresh evidence of interbreeding among the Ice Age Columbian and woolly mammoths, which crossed paths in locations where the more temperate regions of North America met the glaciers that then covered large parts of the continent.

The research was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

– Reuters

http://www.farmingportal.co.za/index.ph ... o-surprise


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Re: African Elephant

Post by Lisbeth »

These new studies are fascinating. Being able to use DNN a lot of surprises come up.
Researchers said on Monday that their research confirmed that the two types of African elephants, those inhabiting forests and those roaming savannas, are separate species that have lived in nearly complete isolation from one another for the past half million years despite their close proximity.
This I have already seen/heard somewhere though.

:ty: Okie!


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Re: African Elephant

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Interesting! \O


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Re: African Elephant

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Hmmm...but if they say so? -O-


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Re: African Elephant

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phpBB [video]



https://lowvelder.co.za/425594/video-ba ... ck-charge/


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