Ella The Baby Giant Herbivore
by Barbara McMahon
Title
Ella The Baby Giant Herbivore
Artist
Barbara McMahon
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Ella, a three month old Asian elephant was being taught how to eat carrots by her mother and adult sibling.
Asian elephants are huge gray animals inhabiting Asian tropical forests. Their gray coloration conceals them in their shady habitat. Elephants' trunks, unique among living mammals, are versatile, enabling them to reach the ground, manipulate tiny objects or tear down huge tree limbs, squirt water over their backs or into their mouths, or blow dirt onto their backs during dust baths. Female Asian elephants usually lack visible tusks as do males in some populations, such as those in northeast India. Wide, padded feet enable them to walk quietly. Large, flappable ears help these huge animals cool off, although elephants often must retreat to the shade or water during the hottest part of the day. Asian elephants grow up to 21 feet long, stand up to 10 feet tall, and weigh up to 11,000 pounds. Females reach around eight and a half feet tall and weigh less than males. Despite their size, elephants are able to walk silently.
The Asian elephant is listed as endangered on the World Conservation Union's (IUCN's) Red List of Threatened Animals. In the wild, Asian elephants may live up to about 60 years but most do not live that long.
Asian elephants once ranged from Iraq east through Asia south of the Himalayas, into southern China and possibly south to Java. However, centuries of hunting and habitat destruction caused dramatic declines. Males are still killed for their tusks, although this happens less often today thanks to a global ivory ban, in place since 1989. Today, Asian elephants thrive mostly in large remote reserves as well as in and among human habitation. Where elephants and people inhabit the same area, conflicts often occur.
Elephants can cause great damage to crops, and they occasionally kill people. Males in musth are responsible for the majority of attacks. Elephants play important roles in the cultures and religions of countries in most of their range, which inspires support for habitat protection measures, continued studies about elephants and their conservation needs, and efforts to mitigate conflicts between elephants and people.
Uploaded
November 24th, 2013
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Viewed 268 Times - Last Visitor from King Of Prussia, PA on 04/22/2024 at 4:04 AM
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Comments (8)
Barbara McMahon
Thank you Jeanette Hunt for featuring "Ella The Baby Giant Herbivore" in the Animals PHOTOS ONLY group! Much appreciated.
Music of the Heart
Such a wonderful, beautifully framed glimpse into this elephant family!!!! You are so creative, Barbara! Love it. LF
Barbara McMahon
Thank you Robert Harmon for featuring "Ella The Baby Giant Herbivore" in the Nature Photography Group! I appreciate it very much.