Elephantidae Elephant (Disambiguation)
Elephantidae Elephant (Disambiguation)
Elephants
Temporal range: Pliocene–Present
PreꞒ
Pg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Proboscidea
Family: Elephantidae
Subfamily: Elephantinae
Groups included
Loxodonta Anonymous,
1827
Elephas Linnaeus, 1758
†Palaeoloxodon Matsu
moto, 1925
Cladistically included but
†Mammuthus Brookes,
1828
†Primelephas Maglio,
1970
Contents
1Etymology
2Taxonomy and phylogeny
o 2.1Evolution and extinct relatives
3Anatomy and morphology
o 3.1Size
o 3.2Bones
o 3.3Head
o 3.4Ears
o 3.5Trunk
o 3.6Teeth
3.6.1Tusks
o 3.7Skin
o 3.8Legs, locomotion, and posture
o 3.9Organs
o 3.10Body temperature
4Behaviour and life history
o 4.1Ecology and activities
o 4.2Social organisation
o 4.3Sexual behaviour
4.3.1Musth
4.3.2Mating
o 4.4Birth and development
o 4.5Communication
o 4.6Intelligence and cognition
5Conservation
o 5.1Status
o 5.2Threats
6Association with humans
o 6.1Working animal
o 6.2Warfare
o 6.3Zoos and circuses
o 6.4Attacks
o 6.5Cultural depictions
7See also
8References
o 8.1Bibliography
9Further reading
10External links
Etymology
The word "elephant" is based on the Latin elephas (genitive elephantis) ("elephant"),
which is the Latinised form of the Greek ἐλέφας (elephas) (genitive ἐλέφαντος
(elephantos ), probably from a non-Indo-European language, likely Phoenician. It is
[1] [2]
As in Mycenaean Greek, Homer used the Greek word to mean ivory, but after the time
[4]
of Herodotus, it also referred to the animal. The word "elephant" appears in Middle
[1]
Proboscidea
Deinotheriidae
Elephantif
ormes
Mammutidae
Gomphotheriidae
Stegodontidae
Elephan
tidae Loxodonta
Mammuthus
Elephas
Elephantimorpha Elepha
ntidae
Phylogeny of modern elephants and close extinct relatives based on
molecular evidence[7]
abdomen, and two finger-like extensions at the tip of the trunk. Asian elephants have
smaller ears, a convex or level back, smoother skin, a horizontal abdomen that
occasionally sags in the middle and one extension at the tip of the trunk. The looped
ridges on the molars are narrower in the Asian elephant while those of the African are
more diamond-shaped. The Asian elephant also has dorsal bumps on its head and
some patches of depigmentation on its skin. [11]
Among African elephants, forest elephants have smaller and more rounded ears and
thinner and straighter tusks than bush elephants and are limited in range to the forested
areas of western and Central Africa. Both were traditionally considered a single [12]
Africa. These animals were relatively small and aquatic. Later on, genera such
as Phiomia and Palaeomastodon arose; the latter likely inhabited forests and open
woodlands. Proboscidean diversity declined during the Oligocene. One notable [19]
Miocene and led to the arrival of the elephantids, which descended from, and slowly
replaced, the gomphotheres. The African Primelephas gomphotheroides gave rise
[22]
to Loxodonta, Mammuthus, and Elephas. Loxodonta branched off earliest around the
Miocene and Pliocene boundary while Mammuthus and Elephas diverged later during
the early Pliocene. Loxodonta remained in Africa
while Mammuthus and Elephas spread to Eurasia, and the former reached North
America. At the same time, the stegodontids, another proboscidean group descended
from gomphotheres, spread throughout Asia, including the Indian subcontinent, China,
southeast Asia, and Japan. Mammutids continued to evolve into new species, such as
the American mastodon. [23]
terrestrial mammal of all time. Loxodonta atlantica became the most common species
[25]
in northern and southern Africa but was replaced by Elephas iolensis later in the
Pleistocene. Only when Elephas disappeared from Africa did Loxodonta become
dominant once again, this time in the form of the modern species. Elephas diversified
into new species in Asia, such as E. hysudricus and E. platycephus; the latter the
[26]
been common among elephantid species, which in some cases led to species with
three ancestral genetic components, such as the Palaeoloxodon antiquus. In the Late [7]
The cheek teeth (molars and premolars) of proboscideans became larger and more
specialized, especially after elephants started to switch from C3-plants to C4-grasses,
which caused their teeth to undergo a three-fold increase in teeth height as well as
substantial multiplication of lamellae after about five million years ago. Only in the last
million years or so did they return to a diet mainly consisting of C3 trees and shrubs. [30]
The upper second incisors grew into tusks, which varied in shape from straight, to
[31]