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African Elephant By: Declan Duggan
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Family Tree
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Timeline Paleocene 65.5 - 55.8 M.Y.A Eocene:55. 8-33.9 M.Y.A Oligocene: 33.9- 23.03 M.Y.A Miocene: 23.03- 5.332 M.Y.A Pilocene: 5.332- 2.588 M.Y.A Quaternary: 2.588- present African Elephant PrimelephasPalaeomastodon
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African Elephant Time period: Cenozoic Diet: Grasses, leaves, bamboo, bark, roots. Elephants are also known to eat crops like banana and sugarcane which are grown by farmers. Adult elephants eat 300-400 LBS of food per day.
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Habitat African savannah elephants are found in savannahs in 37 countries south of the Sahara Desert. African forest elephants inhabit the dense rainforests of west and central Africa.
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Population Population:470,000-690,000 The African Elephants are being hunted for their tusks made of ivory. The population has dropped by half since 1970.
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Predators The African Elephant’s predators are lions, wild dogs, crocodiles, and hyenas.
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Adaptations/Environmental mutations The African Elephant has a long flexible truck that allows them to get food off high trees. The African Elephants can suck up and spray water on itself with its trunk to cool down in hot climates. The elephants needed these changes because the food in the trees were getting higher
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Primelephas Habitat: The woodlands of Africa Diet: Herbivore Predators: None Time Period: Pilocene
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Adaptations/Environmental Changes The Primelephas gained shovel like tusks so it was easier to dig up their food The Primelephas needed this adaptation because the ground was getting harder and it had to dig up food.
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Palaeomastodon Diet: Herbivore Habitat: Egypt, Ethopia, and Saudi Arabia Predators: Apterodon, Pterodon and Hyaenodon Time Period: Eocene
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Adaptations The Palaeomastodon’s adaptation is that it has many sets of molars. They have this because they move their jaw back and fourth to grind their food instead of chewing it.
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Credits http://phanimaladaptations.weebly.com/african-elephants.html http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/elephant#Diet http://dinosaurs.about.com/od/mesozoicmammals/p/primelephas.htm http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/fossils.htm https://www.google.com http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page http://elephant.elehost.com/About_Elephants/Stories/Evolution/evolutio n.html http://elephant.elehost.com/About_Elephants/Stories/Evolution/evolutio n.html http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cenozoic/cenozoic.php
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