Elephants are a huge part of popular culture and show up as metaphors  across all media. They form a part of religious beliefs and are often  associated with wisdom or altruism. However, many people who live  outside the normal range of elephants are unfamiliar with the many  interesting facts about them. This list gives an overview of ten  interesting areas about elephants.
10.Types of Elephant
In English, when we say ‘elephant,’ we are actually referring to  several different species. Until 2010, only 2 species of elephant were  scientifically recognized. However, genetic testing has revealed that  there are at least 3 species. These are the Asian elephant alphas  maximus, the African bush elephant loxodonta Africana (also called the  savannah elephant), and the African forest elephant loxodonta cyclones.  The Asian elephant is the smallest, and has small ears and tusks. They  have two prominent bumps on their foreheads. They hold their heads more  erect than both African elephants, have no protruding upper lip, and  have a single short finger-like lip at the end of their trunk which they  use for fine manipulation of objects. Both African elephants have  larger ears, although the forest elephant has much rounder ears, are  less hairy, have larger tusks, rounded foreheads, and have two  finger-like lips on their trunks. The forest elephant has relatively  straight, downward-pointing tusks whilst the bush elephant has  magnificently curved ones. Most elephants are crepuscular, meaning that  they are most active during dawn and evening, although this varies due  to local climate. Unfortunately, all elephant species are endangered.
9.Reproduction
Homosexual elephants, which are well-documented, mate year-round, but  an elephant cow (female) is fertile for only a few days each year.  During this time, bulls (males) will try to court her by using rituals  involving various affectionate gestures and nuzzles. If she accepts one,  she will respond with similar gestures and after 20 minutes or so of a  courting ritual they will mate. If she conceives, she will be pregnant  for 22 months, longer than any other land animal. Some elephants induce  labour by self-medicating with certain plants. The calf (baby), when  born, weighs over 100kg. Elephants are quadrupeds, so unlike humans,  they can have relatively much wider pelvises which gives them lower  infant and mother mortality rates and birth complications than in  humans. Baby elephants are initially blind and some take to sucking  their trunk for comfort in the same way that humans suck their thumbs.  Infants have few survival instincts and are instead taught by their  mothers and the more experienced members of their herds. The mother will  selectively appoint several babysitters to care for the baby so that  she has time to eat enough to produce sufficient milk for it.
8.Social Lives
Female elephants live in a herd of about 10 individuals lead by the  most experienced matriarch, whereas the males are normally solitary and  move from herd to herd. The females in each herd help each other find  food and care for calves. They do not lie down to sleep because of the  excellent support their very straight legs give them. Elephants  communicate within their herds or between herds many kilometers away  mostly using sounds too low for human ears to perceive and by stamping  their feet. Within their herds, elephants are believed to have the same  or similar levels of cooperation as chimpanzees. An elephant herd is  considered one of the most closely-knit societies of any animal, and a  female will only leave it if she dies or is captured by humans. Males  will leave the herd as they become adolescent, around the age of 12, and  live in temporary ‘bachelor herds’ until they are mature and live  alone.
7.Death
Elephant graveyards are not supported by any hard evidence, but death  is important to them nonetheless. Their normal lifespan is 60-80 years.  Elephants, humans, and Neanderthals are the only animals known to have  death rituals. If an elephant becomes sick, herd members will bring it  food and help support it as it stands. If it dies, they will try to  revive it with food and water for a while. Once it is clear that an  elephant is dead, the herd will become very quiet. They often dig a  shallow grave and cover the deceased elephant with dirt and branches,  and will stay at the grave for days afterwards. If the elephant had a  particularly close relationship with its deceased peer, it can show  signs of depression. Even herds that come across an unknown lone  elephant who has died will show it similar respects. There are also  reported cases of elephants burying dead humans they have found in this  way.
6.Extinct Elephants
The elephant taxonomic order, proboscidea, has only 3 members today,  but it used to have over forty. Most of these thrived until the end of  the last glacial period 12500 years ago. These creatures were generally  similar in size to modern Asian elephants, although there were tiny  dwarf elephants and the humongous deinotherium, 4.5m tall and weighing  14 tones. For comparison, the largest African bush elephant recorded was  4m tall and weighed 12 tones. Within proboscidea, the mastodon family  mammutidae contains modern elephants and the very famous mammoths.  Mammoths had long curved tusks and were much hairier than even modern  Asian elephants. The last mammoth to go extinct was the woolly mammoth,  whose numbers had dwindled as the climate warmed and was finally hunted  to extinction in Europe, Asia, and the Americas 12000 years ago,  although some populations isolated from humans persisted until as  recently as 4000 years ago.
           5.Jumbo the Elephant
There have been many famous individual elephants in the world, but  one of the largest was Jumbo, whose name is now used to mean ‘huge.’ His  name is thought to be derived from the Swahili word for ‘boss’ or  ‘chief.’ He was an African bush elephant born in 1861 and taken to a  French zoo as an infant. He was later transferred to a British zoo where  he gave children rides on his back and was greatly admired. Jumbo’s  caretaker even gave him an occasional gallon of whisky which he believed  was good for Jumbo’s health. Eventually Jumbo was sold and exported to  the USA, and such was his popularity that one hundred thousand children  wrote to the Queen asking her to keep Jumbo for them. In the USA he  achieved his full fame and was widely exhibited until his death at the  age of 24. His health had been steadily declining for years, and when he  was hit by a train going at full speed he could not recover, dying soon  after. Jumbo was 4m tall at the time of his death.
4.Teeth and Tusks
Humans are born toothless, grow a set of milk teeth, and finally lose  these as they grow permanent adult teeth. Similarly, elephants are born  without tusks, grow milk tusks, and replace these with adult tusks. In  Asian elephants, females are usually tusk less. Elephants use tusks for  digging and lifting heavy objects, and sometimes as a part of mating  rituals. Although now illegal, there is heavy poaching of elephants for  their tusk ivory. This is believed to be why the average size of  elephant tusks is gradually decreasing – elephants with smaller tusks  are not poached and live to reproduce more. Elephants normally only  sleep 2 or 3 hours each day because they need to spend time eating to  support their huge size, as they can eat up to 150kg of vegetation every  day. Due to their herbivorous diet, elephant teeth wear out quickly and  they have 6 or 7 sets instead of only 2 like humans. New teeth grow in  the back of the mouth and move forward to replace old worn sets. After  the last set has been worn out, solitary elephants will usually die of  starvation whereas herd elephants will help feed starving members of  their group.
3.Trunks
The elephant trunk, a specialized nose, is analogous to an octopus  tentacle in terms of dexterity. It allows them a high degree of  manipulation of objects and elephants are adept tool-users. Elephants  have been taught to paint with their adroit trunks and produce some  fascinating artwork. In captivity, elephants easily learn how to open  simple locks and many master more complex ones, something impossible for  most other animals due to a lack of dexterity and intellect. Elephants  in zoos have worked together to take advantage of this, by having many  act as lookouts as another undoes the lock, or in one instance an  elephant feigned injury as a distraction while another elephant helped  the others escape. Once all the elephants were out, the distraction  elephant climbed to its feet and ran for the door, surprising its  tenders who had been unaware of the ruse.
2.Feet
Each elephant foot has 5 toes, but not every toe has a nail. An easy  way to tell the two African elephant species apart is by counting  toenails. The African forest elephant and the Asian elephant both have 5  toenails on the front feet and 4 on the back feet. The larger African  bush elephant has 4 or sometimes 5 on the front feet and 3 on the back.  An X-ray of an elephant’s foot will reveal that its bones are actually  standing on tip-toe. Their feet are flat because of a large pad of  gristle under each heel which acts as a shock absorber and helps them  walk quietly. Their legs are much straighter than those of other animals  and support their weight so well that elephants sleep while standing.  Elephants spend most of their lives walking huge distances, and their  feet are suitably adapted to such a lifestyle. Zoos which keep elephants  often find they develop foot problems due to a lack of constant  walking, and treatments include tailored shoes to protect their softened  feet.
1.Intelligence
Elephants are some of the most intelligent animals on Earth. Their  brains weigh 5kg, much more than the brain of any other land animal.  Their brains have more complex folds than all animals except whales,  which is thought to be a major factor in their intellect. They commonly  show grief, humor, compassion, cooperation, self-awareness, tool-use,  playfulness, and excellent learning abilities. An elephant in Korea  surprised its zoo keepers by independently learning to mimic the  commands they gave it by verbalizing on the end of its trunk,  successfully learning 8 words and their context. Elephants have a more  developed hippocampus, a brain region responsible for emotion and  spatial awareness, than any other animal, and studies indicate that they  are superior to humans in keeping track of multiple objects in 3D  space. There are many reports of elephants showing altruism towards  other species, such as rescuing trapped dogs at considerable cost to  themselves. As mentioned above, they respect their dead and have death  rituals. There are stories of the herds of elephants killed by humans  retrieving the poached bones and returning them to the place of death to  bury them.










