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Asian Elephant
 
Common Name: Asian elephant, Indian elephant
   
Class:

Mammalia

   
Order: Proboscidae
   
Family: Elephantidae
   
Genus species: Elephas (elephant) maximus (largest)

 

FAST FACTS
FUN FACTS
ECOLOGY & CONSERVATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
  Asian elephant at Busch Gardens Tampa Bay
 
Fast Facts
Description:

huge thick-skinned herbivore with fan-shaped ears and a long trunk, with a single finger-like projection at the tip, which originates between two forward projecting incisors that extend to the ground

   
Size: 2.4 to 3.1 m (8-10 ft.) at the shoulder
   
Weight: 2700 to 5000 kg (6000-11,000 lb.); females are smaller
   
Diet: consumes plants including grasses, fruits, vegetables, leaves, and bark which it gathers with its long trunk
   
Gestation: 18 to 22 months
   
Sexual maturity: females (cows) 8 to 9 years, males (bulls) 10 to 14 years
   
Life span: 60 to 70 years
   
Range: Southeast Asia, Sri Lanka, and Sumatra
   
Habitat: forests, adjoining grasslands, and scrub
   
Population:  
   
Status: listed by USFWS as endangered and protected by CITES
   
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Fun Facts
1.

The elephant's ivory tusks are incisors used for digging, uprooting trees and displaying.

   
2. The dominant elephant in the herd is a female, the matriarch. She is often the oldest, largest or most experienced elephant in the herd of related females and their young.
   
3. An infant elephant is cared for by its mother and other females called "aunties" in the herd.
   
4. Elephants can use low frequency sound waves for communication between members of the herd and individuals outside the herd. These sounds may carry for distances of up to 10 miles.
   
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Ecology and Conservation
 

Asian elephants have adapted to their environment as it changed over vast periods of time. Today they still interact with and shape their environment. Their foraging activities help to maintain the areas in which they live. by pulling down trees to eat leaves, branches, and roots they create clearings in which new young trees and other vegetation grow to provide future nutrition for elephants and other organisms. Elephant trails through the brush are paths that other animals can use. Termites eat elephant feces and often begin construction of termite mounds under piles of feces!

The Asian elephants' forest homes are being ravaged today because of commercial demand for forest derived products such as coffee, tea, rubber, and hardwoods. Crop cultivation, mining for iron ore, and flooding by hydroelectric projects have also acted to diminish the large tracts of land required by elephants for adequate food supplies. Only about 35,000 - 40,000 Asian elephants survive today throughout a discontinuous range in south east Asia.

   
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Bibliography
 

Eisenberg, J.F., McKay, G.M., and Seidensticker, J. Asian Elephants. Washington, DC:

   
  Friends of the National Zoo and National Zoological Park, 1990.
   
  Shoshani, J., Ph.D., Editor. Elephants Majestic Creatures of the Wild Emaus, PA: Rodale Press, 1992.
   
  Whitney, L.P. The Unforgettable Elephant. New York: Walker and Company, 1980.
   
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