The world’s largest land mammal is an impressive creature. Its sheer size and accompanying strength will hold anyone in awe, yet as with so many creatures, it is the finer details that are often the most interesting.
We thought we’d briefly run through three of the seeming minutiae of an elephant’s anatomy and explain why they are so important to their continued health.
Eyelashes
Some of the most elegant eyelashes you’ll find are on an elephant. Granted, when compared to a gigantic six ton bull they might not seem disproportionately long, but they certainly stick out enough to catch our attention.
And that’s by no means the only thing they catch. Dust, pieces of the tree they’re eating, and all manner of small particles could end up in an elephant’s eye if it didn’t have some preventative measure in place, and this is where the eyelashes come in. They play a large part in keeping an elephant’s eye irritant-free.
Elephants are not shy of eating thorn trees. Many species they relish have long, wickedly sharp thorns, and in order to reach the choicest bits of the tree, an elephant might have to put its head right in amongst the foliage, running the very real risk of getting jabbed in the eye by said thorns. Sensitive eyelashes – just like ours – let the creature know when something is hovering close to its eye and will bring about the blink response or cause the elephant to move its head away.
Tusks
Very few people are truly ambidextrous. Most are either right- or left-handed, and it’s the same with elephants, although probably not quite to the same extent.
Elephants generally have a working tusk; one that they favour when it comes to gouging out bark, snapping branches with, etc. More often than not this tusk will be appear slightly more worn – and often shorter – than the other, and one clear identifying feature of the working tusk is the small groove that forms just behind the tip.
The groove forms from countless branches being run over that tusk over the years, wearing it away slowly.
One regularly encounters elephants with one (or sometimes two) stubby tusks; one will have snapped off, sometimes its whole length, sometimes just a short bit. Although bulls sometimes break tusks in fights with each other, for the most part these broken tusks are the working tusk encountering a job that was just a little too much for it; levering a heavy log or catching it in a tree at a funny angle. Losing both tusks is unlikely to be fatal to an elephant, it’s just a great inconvenience.
Wrinkled Skin
Look at an elephant and it looks wrinkly. Like its skin was a couple of sizes too big. The older they are, the saggier they look. Don’t we all.
But if you look really closely (inadvisable, unless you’re using binoculars), you’ll discover that the skin is made up of way more convolutions, cracks and crevices than you imagined.
It’s all about temperature control.
Elephants don’t have sweat glands like we do. They have a few, but these are all situated on their feet. Instead they stay cool by spraying themselves with mud or water, or even completely immersing themselves in either. The cracked skin results in a far slower evaporation rate than smooth skin would, with up to 10% more moisture being retained. On a hot day in Africa, a completely wet elephant would be dry in mere minutes if its skin was smooth, which wouldn’t help it much.
Apparently the smaller cracks form through the growth of the skin itself; the outermost layer of skin gets thicker and bends as new layers form underneath, until the brittle outer material fractures. If this didn’t happen elephants would shed their skin much like we do (in tiny flakes and slowly, not in one piece like a snake), which also wouldn’t help much. They’d get pretty hot, pretty quickly.
Whilst animal behaviour is usually what draws people to wildlife areas, knowing how their bodies work and are actually put together helps enormously when it comes to interpreting exactly what an animals is doing. And that’s as true for a bullfrog or a Wahlberg’s eagle as it is for the largest land mammal on earth.
Interesting elephant facts. Love it.
Hi James, do you know if sex is linked to the use of oneparticular tusk in elephants – for example left-handed are males and right-handed are females or it has nothing to do with it? In some animals, cats for example, males are prominently left-handed and female right-handed. This behaviour presumably developed because female take care of kittens and have much to think of…
Haha Francesca I actually have no idea!
James, I loved all the photos, especially the eye🤗
Love this!!
Very interesting blog on elephants, James. Learnt a lot. Thank you so much. Wendy M
I love those macro shots of the elephant skin, that is very interesting.
Fascinating post. Thanks for descriptive details and the photos to match!
Incredible creation of life
Thank you! That was very informative. The more one learns, the more one realises how little one knows.
Thank you. I appreciate learning something new about wildlife and whilst I knew about the functions of an elephant’s tusks, I had no idea why their lashes were so important. I have spent much time on safaris just shooting images of these same parts and also their feet- a bit more of the challenge in shooting these beautiful animals.
James, we were supposed celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary Sept 5, 2020. Now we are going to celebrate our 51st wedding anniversary Sept 5, 2021
Well, first of all, We know it doesn’t have to be asked if the Elephant wears Maybelline mascara, yet we also know that far and few women would desire to have an Elephant’s eyelashes, less it be for Halloween! (Haha!)
And as for the “Catholic diet,” You missed one item on the short list James, (less it need to be mentioned, bahahaha! .. smile- chuckle). –
One thing you didn’t mention, is “how” Elephants handle those thorn branches? Accordingly, Elephants have four molars that they go through 6 sets (times) in their lifetimes. That’s not many teeth! .. How does an Elephant handle the thorns when they ingest them? How do they not get jabbed by the thorns? ..Is their internal mouth lining structure super thick? They are not only immense creatures, but intensely solid creatures inside as well as out, beyond conceptualization and measure!
And another question: Why does an Elephant’s skin wrinkle up the way it does? Is it due to a lack of animal hormones (compared to that of a human’s collagen make-up?) An Elephant’s physical composition is truly compelling in thought.
Fascinating James. You guys are walking encyclopedias.! For someone who grew up near the bushveld l learn something new every day. Can certainly relate to the crusty old skin 😂, sadly it doesn’t help to keep me cooler. 🙏💕
Very interesting! I learned something new today! Thanks!
Simply fascinating. I always LOVE those little details to color in the picture.
Great blog with interesting new information for me, all well-illustrated with your photos, James. Thanks!
Great information and the photos are wonderful!
Awww I love ellies so very much.
Thank you for the interesting blog
Elephants are wonderful and it is do interesting to learn about these useful tools they have. I usually am so overwhelmed by their size and est hung them play in the water I had not thought about these necessary items. thank you ! Victoria
Interesting facts on elephants. I love the photos.
Very informative indeed James.Elephant lack sweat glands does this have something to do with their epidermis composition? Thermoregulatory mechanism of elephants is however functional and use of thermal windows oe must l say *hotspots* disseminates heat away from vital organs.Extra loose skin is a natural temperature regulation model in that it dilutes excess heat.Wrinkled skin as well plays a vital role in temp regulation.Monocular sight abtly compensated by acute smell,hearing.Tail seems to have sensory processing ability too , l have observed many a time that objects from the back environs seem to be picked up by the tail detecting vibrations or movements in immediate environs thus alerting elephant.
Elephants feet have act as 3rd ear by virtue of picking up inaudible inter-specie communication signals sounds that humans aint able to hear as they are low frequency.This ultra sonic sound travels further via hard surfaces like the ground.. Elephants pick up these codes via their pads beneath feet,foot structure & composition is soft ,spongy , nerve filled and after picking up vital data off the ground and its conveyed to brain for further review.This elephants radio code like serves to share resource and security themed intel amongst elephants.
More utterly fascinating details of these amazing animals!
Good written! Thank you for sharing these interesting facts!
“Don’t we all.” Amen brother