Dictionary Definition
elephant
Noun
1 five-toed pachyderm
2 the symbol of the Republican Party; introduced
in cartoons by Thomas Nast in 1874
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Scientific names
Derived terms
- African bush elephant
- African elephant
- African forest elephant
- Asian elephant
- Asiatic elephant
- Borneo elephant, Borneo pygmy elephant
- double elephant, double elephant paper
- dwarf elephant
- elephant apple
- elephant bed
- elephant beetle
- elephant bird, elephantbird
- elephant chess
- elephant-color, elephant-colour
- elephant cord
- elephant creeper
- elephant ear, elephant ears
- elephant fish
- elephant flipping
- elephant folio
- Elephant Gambit
- elephant garlic
- elephant grass
- elephant-gravel
- elephant-gray, elephant-grey
- elephant gun
- Elephant Hall
- elephant hawk moth
- elephanticide
- elephantide
- elephant in Cairo
- elephant in the corner, elephant in the kitchen, elephant in the living room, elephant in the room
- Elephant Island
- elephantitis
- elephant joke
- elephant juice
- elephant leg
- Elephant Man
- elephant man's disease
- elephant man's syndrome
- elephant on the dinner table
- elephant paper
- elephant-path
- elephant pearl
- elephant polo
- elephant-rain
- elephantry
- elephant's breath
- elephant seal
- elephant's ear, elephant's ears
- elephant's foot
- elephant's foot umbrella stand
- elephant's-grass
- elephants' graveyard
- elephantship
- elephant shrew
- elephant's teeth
- elephant's trunk, elephant trunk
- Elephant's Trunk Nebula
- elephant's trunk plant
- elephant's trunk snake
- elephant's tusk
- elephant's-tusks
- elephant's-vine
- elephant test
- elephant trank
- elephant tranquilizer, elephant tranquilliser, elephant tranquillizer
- Elephant Trap
- elephant tree
- elephant-trumpet
- elephant-trunk fish
- Elephant Trunk nebula
- elephant-tusk
- elephant yam
- Flying Elephant
- forest elephant
- get a look at the elephant
- imperial elephant
- Indian elephant
- Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant
- Order of the Elephant
- pad elephant
- pink elephant
- pink elephants
- pseudelephant
- pygmy elephant
- retail elephant
- rogue elephant
- savanna elephant, savannah elephant
- sea elephant
- see the elephant
- show the elephant
- Sri Lankan elephant
- straight-tusked elephant
- Sumatran elephant
- temple elephant
- war elephant
- water elephant
- white elephant
Related terms
- chryselephantine
- elephancy
- elephanta
- elephanter
- elephantiac
- elephantiasis
- elephantic
- Elephantidae
- elephantine
- elephantoid
- Elephantopus
- Elephas
Translations
mammal
- Albanian: elefant
- Arabic: (fīl)
- Aramaic:
- Armenian: փիղ (p‘igh)
- Azeri: fil
- Basque: elefante
- Belarusian: слон
- Bosnian: slon, slonica
- Breton: olifant , olifanted p
- Bulgarian: слон
- Catalan: elefant
- Cherokee: ᎧᎹᎹ (kamama)
- Chinese: 象 (xiàng), 大象 (dàxiàng)
- Croatian: slon, slonica
- Czech: slon
- Danish: elefant
- Dutch: olifant
- Esperanto: elefanto
- Estonian: elevant
- Faroese: fílur
- Finnish: norsu, elefantti
- French: éléphant
- Friulian: elefant
- Galician: elefante
- German: Elefant
- Greek: ελέφαντας (eléfantas)
- Greek, Ancient: ἐλέφας (eléphas)
- Hebrew: פיל
- Hindi: हाथी (hāthī), हस्ती (hastī), गज (gaj)
- Hungarian: elefánt
- Icelandic: fíll
- Indonesian: gajah
- Interlingua: elephante
- Irish: eilifint
- Italian: elefante
- Japanese: 象 (ぞう, zō)
- Korean: 코끼리 (kokkiri)
- Kurdish: فیل
- Ladin: elefant
- Lao: (saang)
- Latin: elephantus, elephas
- Latvian: zilonis
- Lithuanian: dramblys
- Lower Sorbian: elefant, (słon)
- Macedonian: слон (slon)
- Malayalam: ആന (aana)
- Maltese: iljunfant
- Mongolian: заан
- Norwegian: elefant
- Occitan: elefant
- Old English: elpend
- Persian: (fil), (pil)
- Polish: słoń, słonica
- Portuguese: elefante, elefanta
- Romanian: elefant
- Romansh: elefant
- Romany: woroslano woroslanka
- Russian: слон
- Sami: elefánta
- Sanskrit: इभ (ibhas) , गज (gaja)
- Sardinian: elefante/elefanti
- Scottish: ailbhean
- Serbian:
- Slovak: slon
- Slovene: slon, slonica
- Spanish: elefante
- Swahili: ndovu, tembo
- Swedish: elefant
- Telugu: ఏనుగు (aenugu)
- Thai: (chang)
- Turan: pil
- Turkish: fil
- Ukrainian: слон
- Upper Sorbian: elefant, (słon)
- Urdu: (hāthī), (hastī), (fīl), (pīl), (gaj)
- Welsh: eliffant
- West Frisian: oaljefant
anything huge and ponderous
Extensive Definition
Elephants (Elephantidae) are a family
in the order
Proboscidea in
the class
Mammalia.
They were once classified along with other thick skinned animals in
a now invalid order,
Pachydermata.
There are three living species: the African
Bush Elephant, the African
Forest Elephant (until recently known collectively as the
African
Elephant), and the Asian
Elephant (also known as the Indian Elephant). Other species
have become extinct
since the last ice age, which
ended about 10,000 years
ago, the Mammoths being the
most well-known of these.
Elephants are mammals, and the largest
land animals alive today. The elephant's gestation period is 22 months,
the longest of any land animal. At birth it is common for an
elephant calf to weigh 120 kilograms
(265 lb).
An elephant may live as long as 70 years, sometimes
longer. The largest elephant ever recorded was shot in Angola in 1956. This
male weighed about 12,000 kg (26,400 lb), with a
shoulder height of 4.2 m (13.8 ft), a metre
(3 ft 4 in) taller than the average male African
elephant. The smallest elephants, about the size of a calf or a
large pig, were a prehistoric species that lived on the island of
Crete during
the Pleistocene
epoch.
Elephants are symbols of wisdom in Asian cultures
and are famed for their memory and high intelligence, where they
are thought to be on par with cetaceans and hominids. Aristotle once
said the elephant was "the beast which passeth all others in wit
and mind."
Elephants are increasingly threatened by human
intrusion and poaching. Once numbering in the millions, the African
elephant population has dwindled to between 470,000 and 690,000
individuals. The elephant is now a protected species worldwide,
with restrictions in place on capture, domestic use, and trade in
products such as ivory.
Elephants generally have no natural predators, although lions may
take calves and occasionally adults. In some areas, lions may
regularly take to preying on elephants.
The word "elephant" has its origins in the Greek
ἐλέφας, meaning "ivory" or "elephant".
Zoology
Species
The African Elephant genus contains two (or, arguably, three) living species; whereas, the Asian Elephant species is the only surviving member of the Asian Elephant genus, but can be divided into four subspecies.African elephants, at up to 3.9 m
(13 ft) tall and weighing 7500 kg
(8.25 short tons), are usually larger than the
Asian species and they have bigger ears. Both male and female
African elephants have long tusks, while their Asian counterparts
have shorter ones, with those of females vanishingly small. African
elephants have a dipped back, smooth forehead and two "fingers" at
the tip of their trunks, whereas the Asian have an arched back, two
humps on the forehead and only one "finger" at the tip of their
trunks.
African elephants are further subdivided into two
populations, the Savanna
and Forest,
and recent genetic studies have led to a reclassification of these
as separate species, the forest population now being called
Loxodonta cyclotis, and the Savanna (or Bush) population termed
Loxodonta africana. This reclassification has important
implications for conservation, because it means that where
previously it was assumed that a single and endangered species
comprised two small populations, if in reality these are two
separate species, then as a consequence, both could be more gravely
endangered than a more numerous and wide-ranging single species
might have been. There is also a potential danger in that, if the
forest elephant is not explicitly listed as an endangered species,
poachers and smugglers might be able to evade the law forbidding
trade in endangered animals and their body parts.
The Forest elephant and the Savanna elephant can
hybridise – that is, breed together – successfully, though their
preferences for different terrains reduce such opportunities. As
the African elephant has only recently been recognized to comprise
two separate species, groups of captive elephants have not been
comprehensively classified and some could well be hybrids.
Successful hybridisation between African and
Asian Elephant species is much more unlikely, as is animal
hybridization across different genera in general. In 1978, however,
at Chester Zoo,
an Asian elephant cow gave birth to a hybrid calf sired by an
African elephant bull (the old terms are used here as these events
pre-date the current classifications). "Motty", the resulting
hybrid male calf, had an African elephant's cheeks, their ears
(large with pointed lobes) and legs (longer and slimmer), but the
toenail numbers, (5 for each front foot, 4 hind) and the single
trunk finger of an Asian elephant. His wrinkled trunk was like that
of an African elephant. His forehead was sloping with one dome and
two smaller domes behind it. The body was African in type, but had
an Asian-type centre hump and an African-type rear hump. The calf
died of infection 12 days later. It is preserved as a mounted
specimen at the British Natural
History Museum, London. There are unconfirmed rumours of three
other hybrid elephants born in zoos or circuses; all are said to
have been deformed and none survived.
African Elephant
The Elephants of the genus Loxodonta, known collectively as African elephants, are currently found in 37 countries in Africa.African elephants are distinguished from Asian
elephants in several ways, the most noticeable being their ears.
Africans' ears are much larger. The African is typically larger
than the Asian and has a concave back. Both African males and
females have external tusks and are usually less hairy than their
Asian cousins.
African elephants have traditionally been
classified as a single species comprising two distinct subspecies,
namely the savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana africana) and the
forest elephant (Loxodonta africana cyclotis), but recent DNA analysis
suggests that these may actually constitute distinct species. While
this split is not universally accepted by experts a third species
of African elephant has also been proposed.
Under the new two species classification,
Loxodonta africana refers specifically to the Savanna Elephant, the
largest of all elephants. In fact, it is the largest land animal in
the world, standing up to 4 m (13 ft) at the
shoulder and weighing approximately 7,000 kg
(7.7 tons). The average male stands about 3 m
(10 ft) tall at the shoulder and weighs about
5500–6000 kg (6.1–6.6 tons), the female being
much smaller. Most often, Savanna Elephants are found in open
grasslands, marshes, and lakeshores. They
range over much of the savanna zone south of
the Sahara.
The other postulated species is the Forest
Elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis). Compared with the Savanna Elephant,
its ears are usually smaller and rounder, and its tusks thinner and
straighter and not directed outwards as much. The Forest Elephant
can weigh up to 4,500 kg (10,000 lb) and stand
about 3 m (10 ft) tall. Much less is known about
these animals than their savanna cousins because environmental and
political obstacles make them difficult to study. Normally, they
inhabit the dense African rain forests of central and western
Africa, though occasionally they roam the edges of forests and so
overlap the territories
of the Savanna elephants and breed with them. In 1979, Iain
Douglas-Hamilton estimated the continental population of
African elephants at around 1.3 million animals. This estimate is
controversial and is believed to be a gross overestimate, but it is
very widely cited and has become a de facto baseline that continues
to be incorrectly used to quantify downward population trends in
the species. Through the 1980s, Loxodonta received worldwide
attention due to the dwindling numbers of major populations in East
Africa, largely as a result of poaching. Today, according to
IUCN’s African
Elephant Status Report 2007 there are approximately between 470,000
and 690,000 African elephants in the wild. Although this estimate
only covers about half of the total elephant range, experts do not
believe the true figure to be much higher, as it is unlikely that
large populations remain to be discovered. By far the largest
populations are now found in Southern and Eastern Africa, which
together account for the majority of the continental population.
According to a recent analysis by IUCN experts, most major
populations in Eastern and Southern Africa are stable or have been
steadily increasing since the mid-1990s, at an average rate of 4.5%
per annum.
Elephant populations in West Africa, on the other
hand, are generally small and fragmented, and only account for a
small proportion of the continental total. Much uncertainty remains
as to the size of the elephant population in Central Africa, where
the prevalence of forest makes population surveys difficult, but
poaching for ivory and bushmeat is believed to be intense through
much of the region. South Africa
elephant population almost doubled, rising from from 8,000 to over
20,000, in the thirteen years after a 1995 ban on killing the
animals. The ban was lifted in February 2008, sparking
controversy among environmental groups.
Asian Elephant
The Asian elephant is smaller than the African. It has smaller ears, and typically, only the males have large external tusks.Another subspecies, the Indian
Elephant (Elephas maximus indicus) makes up the bulk of the
Asian elephant population. Numbering approximately 36,000, these
elephants are lighter grey in colour, with depigmentation only on
the ears and trunk. Large males will ordinarily weigh only about
5,000 kg (11,000 lb) but are as tall as the Sri
Lankan. The mainland Asian can be found in 11 Asian countries, from
India to Indonesia. They prefer forested areas and transitional
zones, between forests and grasslands, where greater food variety
is available.
The smallest of all the elephants is the Sumatran
Elephant (Elephas maximus sumatranus). Population estimates for
this group range from 2,100 to 3,000 individuals. It is very light
grey and has less depigmentation than the other Asians, with pink
spots only on the ears. Mature Sumatrans will usually only measure
1.7–2.6 m (5.6–8.5 ft) at the shoulder and weigh
less than 3,000 kg (6,600 lb). An enormous animal
nonetheless, it is considerably smaller than its other Asian (and
African) cousins and exists only on the island of Sumatra, usually
in forested regions and partially wooded habitats.
In 2003 a further subspecies was identified on
Borneo.
Named the Borneo
pygmy elephant, it is smaller and tamer than other Asian
elephants. It also has relatively larger ears, longer tail and
straighter tusks.
Body characteristics
Trunk
The proboscis, or trunk, is a
fusion of the nose and upper lip, elongated and specialized to
become the elephant's most important and versatile appendage.
African elephants are equipped with two fingerlike projections at
the tip of their trunk, while Asians have only one. According to
biologists, the elephant's trunk may have over forty thousand
individual muscles in it, making it sensitive enough to pick up a
single blade of grass, yet strong enough to rip the branches off a
tree. Some sources indicate that the correct number of muscles in
an elephant's trunk is closer to one hundred thousand.
Most herbivores (plant eaters,
like the elephant) possess teeth adapted for cutting and tearing
off plant materials. However, except for the very young or infirm,
elephants always use their trunks to tear up their food and then
place it in their mouth. They will graze on grass or reach up into
trees to grasp leaves, fruit, or entire branches. If the desired
food item is too high up, the elephant will wrap its trunk around
the tree or branch and shake its food loose or sometimes simply
knock the tree down altogether.
The trunk is also used for drinking. Elephants
suck water up into the trunk (up to fifteen quarts or fourteen
litres at a time) and then blow it into their mouth. Elephants also
inhale water to spray on their body during bathing. On top of this
watery coating, the animal will then spray dirt and mud, which act
as a protective sunscreen. When swimming, the trunk makes an
excellent snorkel.
This appendage also plays a key role in many
social interactions. Familiar elephants will greet each other by
entwining their trunks, much like a handshake. They also use them
while play-wrestling, caressing during courtship and mother / child
interactions, and for dominance displays – a raised trunk can be a
warning or threat, while a lowered trunk can be a sign of
submission. Elephants can defend themselves very well by flailing
their trunk at unwanted intruders or by grasping and flinging
them.
An elephant also relies on its trunk for its
highly developed sense of smell. Raising the trunk up in the air
and swivelling it from side to side, like a periscope, it can
determine the location of friends, enemies, and food sources.
Tusks
The tusks of an elephant are its second upper incisors. Tusks grow continuously; an adult male's tusks will grow about 18 cm (7 in) a year. Tusks are used to dig for water, salt, and roots; to debark trees, to eat the bark; to dig into baobab trees to get at the pulp inside; and to move trees and branches when clearing a path. In addition, they are used for marking trees to establish territory and occasionally as weapons.Like humans who are typically right- or
left-handed, elephants are usually right- or left-tusked. The
dominant tusk, called the master tusk, is generally shorter and
more rounded at the tip from wear. Both male and female African
elephants have large tusks that can reach over 3 m (10 ft)
in length and weigh over 90 kg (200 lb). In the
Asian species, only the males have large tusks. Female Asians have
tusks which are very small or absent altogether. Asian males can
have tusks as long as the much larger Africans, but they are
usually much slimmer and lighter; the heaviest recorded is
39 kg (86 lb). The tusk of both species is mostly
made of calcium
phosphate in the form of apatite. As a piece of living
tissue, it is relatively soft (compared with other minerals such as
rock), and the tusk, also known as ivory, is strongly favoured by
artists for its carvability. The desire for elephant ivory has been
one of the major factors in the reduction of the world's elephant
population.
Some extinct relatives of elephants had tusks in
their lower jaws in addition to their upper jaws, such as Gomphotherium,
or only in their lower jaws, such as Deinotherium.
Teeth
Elephants' teeth are very different from those of most other mammals. Over their lives they usually have 28 teeth. These are:- The two upper second incisors: these are the tusks.
- The milk precursors of the tusks.
- 12 premolars, 3 in each side of each jaw.
- 12 molars, 3 in each side of each jaw.
Tusks in the lower jaw are also second incisors.
These grew out large in Deinotherium
and some mastodons, but
in modern elephants they disappear early without erupting.
Skin
Elephants are called pachyderms, which means thick-skinned animals. An elephant's skin is extremely tough around most parts of its body and measures about 2.5 centimetres (1 in) thick. However, the skin around the mouth and inside of the ear is paper thin. Normally, the skin of an Asian is covered with more hair than its African counterpart. This is most noticeable in the young. Asian calves are usually covered with a thick coat of brownish red fuzz. As they get older, this hair darkens and becomes more sparse, but it will always remain on their heads and tails.The species of elephants are typically greyish in
colour, but the Africans very often appear brown or reddish from
wallowing in mud holes of coloured soil. Wallowing is an important
behaviour in elephant society. Not only is it important for
socialization, but the mud acts as a sunscreen, protecting their
skin from harsh ultraviolet radiation. Though tough, an elephant's
skin is very sensitive. Without regular mud baths to protect it
from burning, as well as from insect bites and moisture loss, an
elephant's skin would suffer serious damage. After bathing, the
elephant will usually use its trunk to blow dirt on its body to
help dry and bake on its new protective coat. As elephants are
limited to smaller and smaller areas, there is less water
available, and local herds will often come too close over the right
to use these limited resources.
Wallowing also aids the skin in regulating body
temperatures. Elephants have difficulty in releasing heat through
the skin because, in proportion to their body size, they have very
little of it. The ratio of an elephant's mass to the surface area
of its skin is many times that of a human. Elephants have even been
observed lifting up their legs to expose the soles of their feet,
presumably in an effort to expose more skin to the air. Since wild
elephants live in very hot climates, they must have other means of
getting rid of excess heat.
Legs and feet
An elephant's legs are great straight pillars, as they must be to support its bulk. The elephant needs less muscular power to stand because of its straight legs and large pad-like feet. For this reason an elephant can stand for very long periods of time without tiring. In fact, African elephants rarely lie down unless they are sick or wounded. Indian elephants, in contrast, lie down frequently.The feet of an elephant are nearly round. African
elephants have three nails on each hind foot, and four on each
front foot. Indian elephants have four nails on each hind foot and
five on each front foot. Beneath the bones of the foot is a tough,
gelatinous material that acts as a cushion or shock absorber. Under
the elephant's weight the foot swells, but it gets smaller when the
weight is removed. An elephant can sink deep into mud, but can pull
its legs out readily because its feet become smaller when they are
lifted.
An elephant is a good swimmer, but it can neither
trot,
jump, nor gallop.
It does have two gaits: a walk, and a faster gait that is similar
to running. In walking the legs act as pendulums, with the hips and
shoulders rising and falling while the foot is planted on the
ground. With no "aerial phase," the faster gait does not meet all
the criteria of running, as elephants always have at least one foot
on the ground. However an elephant moving fast uses its legs like a
running animal does, with the hips and shoulders falling and then
rising while the feet are on the ground. In this gait an elephant
will have three feet off the ground at one time. As both of the
hind feet and both of the front feet are off the ground at the same
time, this gait has been likened to the hind legs and the front
legs taking turns running. Although they start this "run" at only 8
km/h, elephants may reach 25 km/h, all the while using the same
gait. At this speed most other four-legged creatures are well
into a gallop, even with leg length accounted for. Spring-like
kinetics may explain the difference between the motion of these and
other animals.
Ears
The large flapping ears of an elephant are also very important for temperature regulation. Elephant ears are made of a very thin layer of skin stretched over cartilage and a rich network of blood vessels. On hot days, elephants will flap their ears constantly, creating a slight breeze. This breeze cools the surface blood vessels, and then the cooler blood gets circulated to the rest of the animal's body. The hot blood entering the ears can be cooled as much as ten degrees Fahrenheit before returning to the body. Differences in the ear sizes of African and Asian elephants can be explained, in part, by their geographical distribution. Africans originated and stayed near the equator, where it is warmer. Therefore, they have bigger ears. Asians live farther north, in slightly cooler climates, and thus have smaller ears.The ears are also used in certain displays of
aggression and during the males' mating period. If an elephant
wants to intimidate a predator or rival, it will spread its ears
out wide to make itself look more massive and imposing. During the
breeding season, males give off an odour from a gland located
behind their eyes. Joyce Poole, a well-known elephant researcher,
has theorized that the males will fan their ears in an effort to
help propel this "elephant cologne" great distances.
Evolution
Although the fossil evidence is uncertain, scientists discovered genetic evidence that the elephant family shares distant ancestry with the sirenians (sea cows) and the hyraxes through gene comparisons. In the distant past, members of the hyrax family grew to large sizes, and it seems likely that the common ancestor of all three modern families was some kind of amphibious hyracoid. One theory suggests that these animals spent most of their time under water, using their trunks like snorkels for breathing.Diet
Elephants are herbivores, spending 16 hours a day collecting plant food. Their diet is at least 50% grasses, supplemented with leaves, bamboo, twigs, bark, roots, and small amounts of fruits, seeds and flowers. Because elephants only digest 40% of what they eat, they have to make up for their digestive system's lack of efficiency in volume. An adult elephant can consume 140–270 kg (300–600 lb) of food a day. 60% of that food leaves the elephant's body undigested.Intelligence
With a mass just over 5 kg
(11 lb), elephant brains are larger than those of any land
animal, and although the largest whales have body masses twentyfold
those of a typical elephant, whale brains are barely twice the mass
of an elephant's. A wide variety of behaviours, including those
associated with grief,
making music, art, altruism,
allomothering, play, use of tools, compassion and self-awareness
evidence a highly intelligent species on par with cetaceans
Homosexuality
African as well as Asiatic males will engage in same-sex bonding and mounting. Such encounters are often associated with affectionate interactions, such as kissing, trunk intertwining, and placing trunks in each other's mouths. The encounters are analogous to heterosexual bouts, one male often extending his trunk along the other's back and pushing forward with his tusks to signify his intention to mount. Unlike heterosexual relations, which are always of a fleeting nature, those between males result in a "companionship", consisting of an older individual and one or two younger, attendant males. Same-sex relations are common and frequent in both sexes, with Asiatic elephants in captivity devoting roughly 45% of sexual encounters to same-sex activity.Communication
Elephants communicate over long distances by producing and receiving low-frequency sound (infrasound), a sub-sonic rumbling, which can travel through the ground farther than sound travels through the air. This can be felt by the sensitive skin of an elephant's feet and trunk, which pick up the resonant vibrations much as the flat skin on the head of a drum. To listen attentively, every member of the herd will lift one foreleg from the ground, and face the source of the sound, or often lay its trunk on the ground. The lifting presumably increases the ground contact and sensitivity of the remaining legs. This ability is thought also to aid their navigation by use of external sources of infrasound. Discovery of this new aspect of elephant social communication and perception came with breakthroughs in audio technology, which can pick up frequencies outside the range of the human ear. Pioneering research in elephant infrasound communication was done by Katy Payne, of the Elephant Listening Project, and is detailed in her book Silent Thunder. Though this research is still in its infancy, it is helping to solve many mysteries, such as how elephants can find distant potential mates, and how social groups are able to coordinate their movements over extensive range.Painting
Some elephants in Thailand have been trained to paint self portraits.Videos of elephants painting self-portraits have
circulated the internet leaving many to wonder if they had been
part of a hoax. The myth-busting website De-Fact-o.com
has dedicated an article to validating the authenticity of the
videos.
Reproduction, calves, and calf rearing
Elephant calves
Elephant social life revolves around breeding and raising of the calves. A female will usually be ready to breed around the age of thirteen, at which time she will seek out the most attractive male to mate with. Females are generally attracted to bigger, stronger, and, most importantly, older males. Such a reproductive strategy tends to increase their offspring's chances of survival.After a twenty-two-month pregnancy, the mother
will give birth to a calf that will weigh about 113 kg
(250 lb) and stand over 76 cm (2.5 ft)
tall. Elephants have a very long childhood. They are born with
fewer survival instincts than many other animals. Instead, they
must rely on their elders to teach them the things they need to
know. Today, however, the pressures humans have put on the wild
elephant populations, from poaching to habitat destruction, mean
that the elderly often die at a younger age, leaving fewer teachers
for the young.
All members of the tightly knit female group
participate in the care and protection of the young. Since everyone
in the herd is related, there is never a shortage of baby-sitters.
In fact, a new calf is usually the centre of attention for all herd
members. All the adults and most of the other young will gather
around the newborn, touching and caressing it with their trunks.
The baby is born nearly blind and at first relies, almost
completely, on its trunk to discover the world around it.
Allomothers
After the initial excitement, the mother will usually select several full-time baby-sitters, or "allomothers", from her group. According to Cynthia Moss, a well known researcher, these allomothers will help in all aspects of raising the calf. They walk with the young as the herd travels, helping the calves along if they fall or get stuck in the mud. The more allomothers a baby has, the more free time its mother has to feed herself. Providing a calf with nutritious milk means the mother has to eat more nutritious food herself. So, the more allomothers, the better the calf's chances of survival. An elephant is considered an allomother when she is not able to have her own baby. A benefit of being an allomother is that she can gain experience or receive assistance when caring for her own calf.Effect on the environment
Elephants' foraging activities affect the areas in which they live:- By pulling down trees to eat leaves, breaking branches, and pulling out roots they create clearings in which new young trees and other vegetation grow to provide future nutrition for elephants and other organisms.
- Elephants make pathways through the environment that are used by other animals to access areas normally out of reach. The pathways have been used by several generations of elephants, and today people are converting many of them to paved roads.
- During the dry season elephants use their tusks to dig into dry river beds to reach underground sources of water. These newly dug water holes may become the only source of water in the area.
- Elephants are a species which many other organisms depend on. For example, termites eat elephant feces and often begin building termite mounds under piles of elephant feces.
Threat of extinction
Hunting
The threat to the African elephant presented by the ivory trade is unique to the species. Larger, long-lived, slow-breeding animals, like the elephant, are more susceptible to overhunting than other animals. They cannot hide, and it takes many years for an elephant to grow and reproduce. An elephant needs an average of 140 kg (300 lb) of vegetation a day to survive. As large predators are hunted, the local small grazer populations (the elephant's food competitors) find themselves on the rise. The increased number of herbivores ravage the local trees, shrubs, and grasses. Elephants themselves have few natural predators besides man and, occasionally, lions.Dehabitation
Another threat to elephant's survival in general is the ongoing cultivation of their habitats with increasing risk of conflicts of interest with human cohabitants. These conflicts kill 150 elephants and up to 100 people per year in Sri Lanka. Lacking the massive tusks of its African cousins, the Asian elephant's demise can be attributed mostly to loss of its habitat.As larger patches of forest disappear, the
ecosystem is affected in profound ways. The trees are responsible
for anchoring soil and absorbing water runoff. Floods and massive
erosion are common results of deforestation. Elephants need massive
tracts of land because, much like the slash-and-burn farmers, they
are used to crashing through the forest, tearing down trees and
shrubs for food and then cycling back later on, when the area has
regrown. As forests are reduced to small pockets, elephants become
part of the problem, quickly destroying all the vegetation in an
area, eliminating all their resources.
National parks
Africa's first official reserve eventually became one of the world's most famous and successful national parks. Kruger National Park in South Africa first became a reserve against great opposition in 1898 (then Sabi Reserve). It was deproclaimed and reproclaimed several times before it was renamed and granted national park status in 1926. It was to be the first of many.There were many problems in establishing these
reserves. For example, elephants range through a wide tract of land
with little regard for national borders. However, when most parks
were created, the boundaries were drawn at the human-made borders
of individual countries. Once a fence was erected, many animals
found themselves cut off from their winter feeding grounds or
spring breeding areas. Some animals died as a result, while some,
like the elephants, just trampled through the fences. This did
little to belie their image as a crop-raiding pest. The more often
an elephant wandered off its reserve, the more trouble it got into,
and the more chance it had of being shot by an angry farmer. When
confined to small territories, elephants can inflict an enormous
amount of damage to the local landscapes. Today there are still
many problems associated with these parks and reserves, but there
is now little question as to whether or not they are necessary. As
scientists learn more about nature and the environment, it becomes
very clear that these parks may be the elephant's last hope against
the rapidly changing world around them.
Additionally, Kruger National Park has suffered
from elephant overcrowding, at the expense of other species of
wildlife within the reserve. South Africa slaughtered 14,562
elephants in the reserve between 1967 and 1994; it stopped in 1995,
mostly due to international and local pressure. Officials at the
Kruger National Park say that without action, the elephant
population there will likely triple to 34,000 by 2020.
On 25 February 2008 the South African
Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism announced that
South Africa would reintroduce culling for the first time since
1994 to control elephant numbers, which environmentalists say are
threatening the country’s game reserves.
Humanity and elephants
Harvest from the wild
The harvest of elephants, both legal and illegal,
has had some unexpected consequences on elephant anatomy as well.
African ivory hunters, by killing only tusked elephants, have given
a much larger chance of mating to elephants with small tusks or no
tusks at all. The propagation of the absent-tusk gene has resulted
in the birth of large numbers of tuskless elephants, now
approaching 30% in some populations (compare with a rate of about
1% in 1930). Tusklessness, once a very rare genetic abnormality,
has become a widespread hereditary trait.
It is possible, if unlikely, that continued
selection pressure could bring about a complete absence of tusks in
African elephants, a development normally requiring thousands of
years of evolution. The effect of tuskless elephants on the
environment, and on the elephants themselves, could be dramatic.
Elephants use their tusks to root around in the ground for
necessary minerals, tear apart vegetation, and spar with one
another for mating rights. Without tusks, elephant behaviour could
change dramatically.
Domestication and use
Elephants have been working animals used in various capacities by humans. Seals found in the Indus Valley suggest that the elephant was first domesticated in ancient India. However, elephants have never been truly domesticated: the male elephant in his periodic condition of musth is dangerous and difficult to control. Therefore elephants used by humans have typically been female, war elephants being an exception, however: as female elephants in battle will run from a male, only males could be used in war. It is generally more economical to capture wild young elephants and tame them than breeding them in captivity (see also elephant "crushing").War Elephants
War elephants were used by armies in the Indian sub-continent, the Warring States of China, and later by the Persian Empire. This use was adopted by Hellenistic armies after Alexander the Great experienced their worth against king Porus, notably in the Ptolemaic and Seleucid diadoch empires. The Carthaginian general Hannibal took elephants across the Alps when he was fighting the Romans, but brought too few elephants to be of much military use, although his horse cavalry was quite successful; he probably used a now-extinct third African (sub)species, the North African (Forest) elephant, smaller than its two southern cousins, and presumably easier to domesticate. A large elephant in full charge could cause tremendous damage to infantry, and cavalry horses would be afraid of them (see Battle of Hydaspes).Industrial Elephants
Throughout Myanmar (Burma), Siam, India, and most of South Asia elephants were used in the military for heavy labour, especially for uprooting trees and moving logs, and were also commonly used as executioners to crush the condemned underfoot.Elephants have also been used as mounts for
safari-type hunting,
especially Indian shikar (mainly on tigers), and as ceremonial
mounts for royal and religious occasions, whilst Asian elephants
have been used for transport and entertainment, and are
common to circuses
around the world.
African v. Asian Elephants
African elephants have long been reputed to not be domesticable, but some entrepreneurs have succeeded by bringing Asian mahouts from Sri Lanka to Africa. In Botswana, Uttum Corea has been working with African elephants and has several young tame elephants near Gaborone. African elephants are more temperamental than Asian elephants, but are easier to train. Because of their more sensitive temperaments, they require different training methods than Asian elephants and must be trained from infancy hence Corea worked with orphaned elephants. African elephants are now being used for (photo) safaris. Corea's elephants are also used to entertain tourists and haul logs.Criticism
There is growing resistance against the capture, confinement, and use of wild elephants. Animal rights advocates allege that elephants in zoos "suffer a life of chronic physical ailments, social deprivation, emotional starvation, and premature death". However, zoos argue that standards for treatment of elephants are extremely high and that minimum requirements for such things as minimum space requirements, enclosure design, nutrition, reproduction, enrichment and veterinary care are set to ensure the wellbeing of elephants in captivity.Elephants in culture
- George Orwell wrote a famous essay entitled "Shooting an Elephant", chronicling a 1926 episode of being forced to shoot an elephant while he served as an Imperial Policeman in Burma.
- A famous story of Ivo Andrić is titled "A Story about the Vezier's Elephant."
Popular culture
- The phrase 'elephants never forget' refers literally to elephants supposedly having an excellent memory.
- The expression white elephant refers to an expensive burden, particularly to a situation in which much has been invested with false expectations. The phrase 'white elephant sale' was sometimes used in Australia as a synonym for jumble sale.
- Jumbo, a circus elephant, has entered the English language as a synonym for "large".
- Dumbo, the elephant who learns to fly in the Disney movie of the same name.
- The French children's storybook character Babar the Elephant (an elephant king) created by Jean de Brunhoff and also an animated TV series.
- The Oakland Athletics mascot is a white elephant. The story of picking the mascot was started when New York Giants' manager John McGraw told reporters that Philadelphia manufacturer Benjamin Shibe, who owned the controlling interest in the new team, had a “white elephant on his hands," Connie Mack defiantly adopted the white elephant as the team mascot, though over the years the elephant has appeared in several different colours (currently forest green). The A’s are sometimes, though infrequently, referred to as the Elephants or White Elephants. The team mascot is nicknamed Stomper.
- The Elephant's Child is one of Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories.
- Horton Hatches the Egg is a book by Dr. Seuss about a faithful elephant who sits on the nest of an irresponsible bird for months.
- Joseph Merrick, a British man in Victorian England was nicknamed "The Elephant Man" due to the nature and extent of his deformities.
- American band the White Stripes' fourth album was entitled Elephant, possibly because of lead singer Jack White's fondness of the animals' extreme sensitivity toward each other. The album was #390 in Rolling Stone magazine's "500 Best Albums of All Time".
- The Thai movie Tom-Yum-Goong (US title: "The Protector", UK title: "Warrior King") is about a man named Kham who travels from Thailand to Australia in pursuit of poachers who have stolen two elephants. Kham is a member of a family that protects the elephants of the King of Thailand. The movie was directed by Prachya Pinkaew and stars Tony Jaa.
- In J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings story, there exist oliphaunts, house-sized versions of elephants.
Religion and philosophy
- The scattered skulls of prehistoric pygmy elephants on Crete, featuring a single large nasal cavity at the front, may have formed the basis of belief in existence of cyclops, the one-eyed giants featured in Homer's Odyssey.
- A white elephant is considered holy in Thailand.
- Ganesh, the Hindu god of wisdom, has an elephant's head.
- Elephants are used in festivals in Sri Lanka, such as the Esala Perahera.
- Temple elephant
- Guruvayur Keshavan famous temple elephant in Kerala, India
- The story of the Blind Men and an Elephant was written to show how reality may be viewed by different perspectives. Its source is unknown, but it appears to have originated in India. It has been attributed to Buddhists, Hindus, Jainists, and Sufis, and was also used by Discordians.
- In Judeo-Christian accounts, including Midrash on the sixth chapter of the apocryphal book of 1 Maccabees, the youngest of the Hasmonean brothers, Eleazar the Maccabee stuck a spear under the foot of an elephant carrying an important Greek-Assyrian general, killing the elephant, the general, and Eleazar.
Politics and secular symbolism
- After Alexander's victory over the Indian king Porus, the captured war elephants became a symbol of imperial power, used as an emblem of the Seleucid diadoch empire, e.g. on coins.
- The elephant, and the white elephant (also a religious symbol of Buddha) in particular, has often been used as a symbol of royal power and prestige in Asia; occurring on the flag of the kingdom Laos (three visible, supporting an umbrella, another symbol of royal power) till it became a republic in 1975, and other Indochinese and Thai realms had also displayed one or more white elephants.
- The elephant is also the symbol for the Republican Party of the United States, originating in an 1874 cartoon of an Asian elephant by Thomas Nast of Harper's Weekly (Nast also originated the donkey as the symbol of the Democratic Party).
- The Order of the Elephant (lang-da Elefantordenen) is the highest order of Denmark, instituted in its current form on 1693 by King Christian V. The collar of the order consists of alternating elephants and towers, and its badge shows an elephant bearing a watch tower, in front of which a Moor is sitting, holding a golden spear.
Elephant rage
Despite its popularity in zoos, and cuddly
portrayal as gentle giants in fiction, Elephants are among the
world's most potentially dangerous animals. They are capable of
crushing and killing any other land animal, even the rhinoceros. They can
experience unexpected bouts of rage, and can be vindictive. In
Africa, groups of young teenage elephants attack human villages in
what is thought to be revenge for the destruction of their society
by massive cullings done in the 1970s and 80s. In India, male
elephants attack villages at night, destroying homes and killing
people on a regular basis. In the Indian state of Jharkhand, 300
people were killed by elephants between 2000 and 2004, and in
Assam, 239 people have been killed by elephants since 2001.
A musth elephant, wild or domesticated, is
extremely dangerous to humans. Domesticated elephants in India are
traditionally tied to a tree and denied food and water for several
days, after which the musth passes. In zoos, musth is often the cause of
fatal accidents to elephant keepers. Zoos keeping adult male
elephants need extremely secure enclosures, which greatly
complicates the attempts to breed
elephants in zoos.
Musth is accompanied by a significant rise in
reproductive
hormones. Testosterone
levels in an elephant in musth can be as much as 60 times greater
than in the same elephant at other times. However, whether this
hormonal surge is the sole cause of musth, or merely a contributing
factor is unknown: scientific investigation of musth is greatly
hindered by the fact that even the most otherwise placid of
elephants may actively try to kill any and all humans. Similarly,
the tar-like secretion remains largely uncharacterised, due to the
difficulties of collecting a sample for analysis.
Although it has often been speculated that musth
is linked to
rut, this is unlikely, because the female elephant's estrus cycle is not
seasonally-linked. Furthermore, bulls in musth have often been
known to attack female elephants, regardless of whether or not the
females are in heat.
The Hindi word "musth" is from the Urdu mast, which in
turn is from a Persian
root meaning "intoxicated".
The Channel 5
British
television
program "The Dark Side of Elephants" (March 20
2006) stated
that during musth:
- The swelling of the temporal glands presses on the elephant's eyes and causes the elephant severe pain comparable to severe root abscess toothache. One elephant behaviour that tries to counteract this is digging the tusks into the ground.
- The musth secretion, which naturally runs down into the elephant's mouth, is full of ketones and aldehydes and (to a human at least) tastes unbelievably foul.
- As a result, musth behaviour is at least partly due to the elephant being driven mad by pain and distress.
Other causes
At least a few elephants have been suspected to
be drunk during their attacks. In December 1998, a herd of
elephants overran a village in India. Although locals reported that
nearby elephants had recently been observed drinking beer which
rendered them "unpredictable", officials considered it the least
likely explanation for the attack. An attack on another Indian
village occurred in October 1999, and again locals believed the
reason was drunkenness, but the theory was not widely accepted.
Purportedly drunk elephants raided yet another Indian village again
on December 2002, killing six people, which led to killing of about
200 elephants by locals. Elephants have used their powers of
deduction to "hijack" trucks carrying sugarcane.
Rogue elephant
Rogue elephant is a term for a lone, violently aggressive wild elephant, separated from the rest of the herd. It is a calque of the Sinhala term hora aliya. Its introduction to English has been attributed by the Oxford English Dictionary to Sir James Emerson Tennent, but this usage may have been pre-dated by William Sirr.Predators, parasites and diseases
Elephants rarely have predators because of their large size, except humans. On one occasion during a drought, lions were videotaped successfully attacking a baby elephant and attempting to attack a full grown female elephant. Both attacks occurred at night.Elephants have a variety of both ecto-parasites
and endo-parasites, including the highly specialized flies of the
genus Cobboldia.
Family classification
- Subfamilia Elephantinae
- Tribe Elephantini (elephants)
- Subtribe Primelephantina
†
- Genus Primelephas †
- Subtribe Loxodontina
- Genus Loxodon
- Subgenus Loxodonta
(African elephants)
- Species Loxodonta
africana
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana adaurora †
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana africana (African Bush Elephant or African Cape Elephant)
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana oxyotis (African Plains Savanna Elephant or West African Steppe Elephant)
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana pharaonensis (North African Elephant, Carthaginian Elephant or Atlas Elephant) †
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana cyclotis (African Forest Elephant)
- Subspecies Loxodonta africana pumilio (or Loxodonta fransseni) (African Pygmy Elephant)
- Species Loxodonta
africana
- Subgenus Loxodonta
(African elephants)
- Genus Loxodon
- Subtribe Elephantina or
Supergenus Elephadon
- Genus Elephas (Eurasian
elephants)
- Species Elephas
maximus (Asian elephant)
- Subspecies Elephas maximus indicus (Indian Elephant)
- Subspecies Elephas maximus maximus (Sri Lankan Elephant)
- Subspecies Elephas maximus sumatrensis (Sumatran Elephant)
- Subspecies Elephas maximus borneensis (Borneo Elephant or Asian Pygmy Elephant)
- Subspecies Elephas maximus rubridens (Chinese Elephant) †
- Subspecies Elephas maximus asurus (Syrian Elephant) †
- Species Elephas beyeri †
- Species Elephas celebensis †
- Species Elephas iolensis †
- Species Elephas planifrons †
- Species Elephas platycephalus †
- Species Elephas
recki †
- Subspecies Elephas recki atavus †
- Subspecies Elephas recki brumpti †
- Subspecies Elephas recki ileretensis †
- Subspecies Elephas recki illertensis †
- Subspecies Elephas recki recki †
- Subspecies Elephas recki shungurensis †
- Subgenus Palaeoloxodon
†
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) antiquus †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) creticus †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) creutzburgi †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) chaniensis †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) cypriotes †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) ekorensis †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) falconeri †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) mnaidriensis †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) melitensis †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) namadicus †
- Species Elephas (Palaeoloxodon) naumanni †
- Species Elephas
maximus (Asian elephant)
- Genus Mammuthus
†
- Species Mammuthus africanavus (African mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus armeniacus (Armenian mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus columbi (Columbian mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus exilis (Pygmy mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus dwarfus (Wrangel Island mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus imperator (American mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus jeffersonii (Jeffersonian mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus lamarmorae (Sardinian Dwarf mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus meridionalis (Southern mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus planifrons †
- Species Mammuthus primigenius (Woolly mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus subplanifrons †
- Species Mammuthus sungari (Songhua River Mammoth) †
- Species Mammuthus trogontherii (Steppe mammoth) †
- Genus Elephas (Eurasian
elephants)
- Subtribe Primelephantina
†
- Tribe Belodontini
†
- Subtribe Belodontina
†
- Genus Stegotetrabelodon †
- Genus Stegodibelodon †
- Subtribe Belodontina
†
- Tribe Elephantini (elephants)
- Subfamilia Stegodontinae
†
- Genus Stegodon †
- Species Stegodon aurorae †
- Species Stegodon elephantoides †
- Species Stegodon florensis †
- Species Stegodon ganesha †
- Species Stegodon insignis †
- Species Stegodon orientalis †
- Species Stegodon shinshuensis †
- Species Stegodon sompoensis †
- Species Stegodon sondaarii †
- Species Stegodon trigonocephalus †
- Species Stegodon zdanski †
- Genus Stegodon †
- Subfamilia Lophodontinae
or Rhynchotheriinae3
†
- Genus Anancus †
- Species Anancus alexeevae †
- Species Anancus arvernensis †
- Species Anancus kenyensis †
- Genus Morrillia †
- Tribe Lophodontini
(Lophodonty) †
- Subtribe Lophodontina
†
- Genus Tetralophodon †
- Genus Paratetralophodon †
- Subtribe Lophodontina
†
- Tribe Cuvieroniini
†
- Genus Stegomastodon
†
- Species Stegomastodon arizonae †
- Species Stegomastodon mirificus †
- Species Stegomastodon primitivus †
- Genus Cuvieronius
†
- Species Cuvieronius hyodon †
- Species Cuvieronius priestleyi †
- Species Cuvieronius tropicus †
- Genus Stegomastodon
†
- Genus Anancus †
1. The supposed African
Pygmy Elephant (Loxodonta (africana) pumilio or Loxodonta
fransseni) is indistinguishable from the normal African Forest
Elephant on a population
genetics level. It appears to be a local morph.
2. The elephant population in Vietnam and Laos is
undergoing tests to determine if it is a fifth subspecies.
3. The subfamily Lophodontinae/Rhynchotheriinae,
are placed by some authors within the gomphotheres, while others
consider them as true Elephantidae.
See also
portalpar Mammals- Ability to swim
- Blind Men and an Elephant
- Crushing by elephant
- Dwarf elephant
- Elephant's graveyard
- Elephant (movie)
- Elephant ear
- Elephant joke
- Elephant in the corner
- Elephant sanctuary
- Elephants in Kerala culture
- Hammerskjoeld Simwinga -- environmentalist
- History of elephants in Europe
- Mûmak
- Temple elephant
- War elephant
- White elephant
- Year of the Elephant
- Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage
- The Elephant House
- :Category:Famous elephants
- :Category:Fictional elephants
References
- Wikisource: "The Blindmen and the Elephant" by John Godfrey Saxe
- External link to national geographics elephant rage episode of Explorer
- Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 26 (2003) 421–434
External links
sisterlinks Elephant- C. Johnson, "Elephant trunks were once snorkels", News in Science 1999-05-11,
- Elephant: Wildlife summary from the African Wildlife Foundation
- EleAid - Elephant facts, info and pictures from Asian elephant charity
- Elephant Encyclopedia
- Sanparks - South African National Parks official website
- How elephants communicate
- Elephant News - latest headlines about elephants
- Elephant Pictures & Information
- Photo of Pinnewella Elephant Orphanage in Sri Lanka
- Seek My Bowl on elephants as symbols
- Elephant Reintroduction Foundation
- Amboseli Trust for Elephants - interactive web site
- Animal info
- List of easy-to-read articles about elephants
- Temple Elephants in India – A short video in Quicktime format.
- African Elephant Database – For current info on African elephant distribution and numbers.
- Elephant Sanctuary Plettenberg Bay South Africa
- Elephant Sanctuary, Howenwald, Tenn.
- Elephant Nature Park, Northern Thailand
- A musth FAQ
- Short Videos
elephant in Afrikaans: Olifant
elephant in Old English (ca. 450-1100):
Elpend
elephant in Arabic: فيل
elephant in Asturian: Elefante
elephant in Bengali: হাতি
elephant in Bosnian: Slon
elephant in Min Nan: Chhiūⁿ
elephant in Bulgarian: Слонове
elephant in Catalan: Elefant
elephant in Czech: Slon
elephant in Welsh: Eliffant
elephant in Danish: Elefant
elephant in German: Elefanten
elephant in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ελέφαντας
elephant in Spanish: Elephantidae
elephant in Esperanto: Elefanto
elephant in Persian: فیل
elephant in Faroese: Fílur
elephant in French: Éléphant
elephant in Western Frisian: Oaljefanten
elephant in Gan Chinese: 象
elephant in Scottish Gaelic: Oilbheint
elephant in Galician: Elefante
elephant in Hakka Chinese: Siong
elephant in Korean: 코끼리
elephant in Croatian: Slonovi
elephant in Ido: Elefanto
elephant in Indonesian: Gajah
elephant in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Elephante
elephant in Zulu: Indlovu
elephant in Icelandic: Fíll
elephant in Italian: Elephantidae
elephant in Hebrew: פיליים
elephant in Javanese: Gajah
elephant in Kannada: ಆನೆ
elephant in Haitian: Elefan
elephant in Kurdish: Fîl
elephant in Latin: Elephantidae
elephant in Luxembourgish: Elefanten
elephant in Lithuanian: Straubliniai
elephant in Limburgan: Olifante
elephant in Lingala: Nzɔku
elephant in Hungarian: Elefántfélék
elephant in Macedonian: Слон
elephant in Malayalam: ആന
elephant in Malay (macrolanguage): Gajah
elephant in Dutch: Olifanten
elephant in Japanese: ゾウ
elephant in Norwegian: Elefanter
elephant in Narom: Êléphant
elephant in Occitan (post 1500):
Elephantidae
elephant in Low German: Elefant
elephant in Polish: Słoniowate
elephant in Portuguese: Elefante
elephant in Romanian: Elefant (animal)
elephant in Quechua: Elephanti
elephant in Russian: Слоновые
elephant in Southern Sotho: Tlou
elephant in Simple English: Elephant
elephant in Slovak: Slonovité
elephant in Slovenian: Sloni
elephant in Finnish: Norsut
elephant in Swedish: Elefanter
elephant in Tagalog: Elepante
elephant in Tamil: யானை
elephant in Thai: ช้าง
elephant in Vietnamese: Voi
elephant in Venda: Nḓou
elephant in Turkish: Fil
elephant in Ukrainian: Слонові
elephant in Yiddish: העלפאנד
elephant in Chinese: 象
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Angora goat, Arctic fox, Belgian hare, Caffre
cat, Indian buffalo, Jumbo, Kodiak bear, Siberian
husky, Virginia deer, aardvark, aardwolf, alpaca, anteater, antelope, antelope chipmunk,
aoudad, apar, armadillo, ass, aurochs, badger, bandicoot, bassarisk, bat, bear, beast of burden, beaver, bettong, binturong, bison, black bear, black buck,
black cat, black fox, black sheep, blue fox, bobcat, brown bear, brush deer,
brush wolf, buffalo,
buffalo wolf, burro, burro
deer, cachalot,
camel, camelopard, capybara, carabao, caribou, carpincho, cat, cat-a-mountain, catamount, cattalo, cavy, chamois, cheetah, chevrotain, chinchilla, chipmunk, cinnamon bear,
coon, coon cat, cotton
mouse, cotton rat, cougar, cow, coyote, coypu, deer, deer tiger, dingo, dinosaur, dog, donkey, dormouse, draft animal,
dromedary, echidna, eland, elk, ermine, eyra, fallow deer, ferret, field mouse, fisher, fitch, flying phalanger, foumart, fox, fox squirrel, gazelle, gemsbok, genet, giraffe, glutton, gnu, gnu goat, goat, goat antelope, gopher, grizzly bear, ground
squirrel, groundhog,
guanaco, guinea pig,
hamster, hare, harnessed antelope, hartebeest, hathi, hedgehog, hippo, hippopotamus, hog, horse, husky, hyena, hyrax, ibex, jackal, jackass, jackrabbit, jaguar, jaguarundi, jerboa, jerboa kangaroo, jumbo, kaama, kangaroo, kangaroo mouse,
kangaroo rat, karakul,
kinkajou, kit fox,
koala, lapin, lemming, leopard, leopard cat, leviathan, lion, llama, lynx, malamute, mammoth, mara, marmot, marten, mastodon, meerkat, mink, mole, mongoose, monster, moose, mouflon, mountain goat, mountain
lion, mountain sheep, mouse, mule, mule deer, muntjac, musk deer, musk hog,
musk-ox, muskrat,
musquash, nilgai, nutria, ocelot, okapi, onager, oont, opossum, otter, ounce, ox, pachyderm, pack horse, pack
rat, painter, panda, pangolin, panther, peccary, peludo, phalanger, pig, pine mouse, platypus, pocket gopher, pocket
mouse, pocket rat, polar bear, polar fox, polecat, porcupine, possum, pouched rat, poyou, prairie dog, prairie wolf,
pronghorn, puma, rabbit, raccoon, rat, red deer, red squirrel,
reindeer, rhino, rhinoceros, river horse,
roe, roe deer, roebuck, sable, serval, sheep, shrew, shrew mole, sika, silver fox, skunk, sledge dog, sloth, snowshoe rabbit, springbok, squirrel, stoat, sumpter, sumpter horse, sumpter
mule, suslik, swamp
rabbit, swine, takin, tamandua, tamarin, tapir, tarpan, tatou, tatou peba, tatouay, tiger, tiger cat, timber wolf,
tree shrew, urus, vole, wallaby, warthog, water buffalo, waterbuck, weasel, whale, wharf rat, whistler, white fox, wild ass,
wild boar, wild goat, wild ox, wildcat, wildebeest, wolf, wolverine, wombat, wood rat, woodchuck, woolly mammoth,
yak, zebra, zebu, zoril