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  2. The Multifaceted Role of Elephant Tusks: Tools, Weapons, and ...

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    Even if it were a painless procedure, many elephants rely on their tusks to accomplish essential survival skills. Being left without the use of a tusk is not dissimilar to losing access to a hand.

  3. How Heavy Poaching Has Led to Tuskless Elephants - AOL

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    Some quarters believe that the female survival rate without these genes is due to the high survival rate of female elephants without tusks. These elephants can survive equally, using their size ...

  4. Tusk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tusk

    Tusks are thought to have adapted to the extra-oral environments, like dry or aquatic or arctic. [1] In most tusked species both the males and the females have tusks although the males' are larger. Most mammals with tusks have a pair of them growing out from either side of the mouth. Tusks are generally curved and have a smooth, continuous surface.

  5. African elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_elephant

    African elephants have grey folded skin up to 30 mm (1.2 in) thick that is covered with sparse, bristled dark-brown to black hair. Short tactile hair grows on the trunk, which has two finger-like processes at the tip, whereas Asian elephants only have one. [7] Their large ears help to reduce body heat.

  6. Elephant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elephant

    Calves are the centre of attention in their family groups and rely on their mothers for as long as three years. Elephants can live up to 70 years in the wild. They communicate by touch, sight, smell, and sound; elephants use infrasound and seismic communication over long distances.

  7. Size, Tusks, and Ears: How African and Asian Elephants Differ

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    Asian elephants do not have this concern, as they live in more tropical and wet climates. The post Size, Tusks, and Ears: How African and Asian Elephants Differ appeared first on A-Z Animals ...

  8. Musth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musth

    A bull elephant in musth, wild or otherwise, is extremely dangerous to humans, other elephants, and other species. Bull elephants in musth have killed keepers/mahouts, as well as other bull elephants, female elephants, and calves (the last usually inadvertently or accidentally in what is often called "herd infighting"). [13]

  9. Elephant Trunks: A Unique Adaptation for Feeding, Sensing ...

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    Due to this fascination, elephants can be found everywhere in popular media, children’s books, and of course, zoos! Another reason Elephant Trunks: A Unique Adaptation for Feeding, Sensing, and ...