African elephants are the largest of
Earth's land mammals. Their enormous ears help them to keep cool in the
hot African climate.
Photograph by Beverly Joubert
Audio
Fast Facts
- Type:
- Mammal
- Diet:
- Herbivore
- Average life span in the wild:
- Up to 70 years
- Size:
- Height at the shoulder, 8.2 to 13 ft (2.5 to 4 m)
- Weight:
- 5,000 to 14,000 lbs (2,268 to 6,350 kg)
- Group name:
- Herd
- Protection status:
- Threatened
- Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
-
African elephants are the largest land animals
on Earth. They are slightly larger than their Asian cousins and can be
identified by their larger ears that look somewhat like the continent of
Africa. (Asian elephants have smaller, rounded ears.)
Elephant
ears radiate heat to help keep these large animals cool, but sometimes
the African heat is too much. Elephants are fond of water and enjoy
showering by sucking water into their trunks and spraying it all over
themselves. Afterwards, they often spray their skin with a protective
coating of dust.
An elephant's trunk is actually
a long nose used for smelling, breathing, trumpeting, drinking, and
also for grabbing things—especially a potential meal. The trunk alone
contains about 100,000 different muscles. African elephants have two
fingerlike features on the end of their trunk that they can use to grab
small items. (Asian elephants have one.)
Both
male and female African elephants have tusks they use to dig for food
and water and strip bark from trees. Males use the tusks to battle one
another, but the ivory has also attracted violence of a far more
dangerous sort.
Because ivory is so valuable to
some humans, many elephants have been killed for their tusks. This trade
is illegal today, but it has not been completely eliminated, and some
African elephant populations remain endangered.
Elephants
eat roots, grasses, fruit, and bark, and they eat a lot of these
things. An adult elephant can consume up to 300 pounds (136 kilograms)
of food in a single day.
These hungry animals do
not sleep much, and they roam over great distances while foraging for
the large quantities of food that they require to sustain their massive
bodies.
Female elephants (cows) live in family herds with their young, but adult males (bulls) tend to roam on their own.
Having
a baby elephant is a serious commitment. Elephants have a longer
pregnancy than any other mammal—almost 22 months. Cows usually give
birth to one calf every two to four years. At birth, elephants already
weigh some 200 pounds (91 kilograms) and stand about 3 feet (1 meter)
tall.
African elephants, unlike their Asian
relatives, are not easily domesticated. They range throughout
sub-Saharan Africa and the rain forests of central and West Africa. The
continent’s northernmost elephants are found in Mali’s Sahel desert. The
small, nomadic herd of Mali elephants migrates in a circular route
through the desert in search of water.

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