The African elephant is the largest living terrestrial animal. Its thickset body rests on stocky legs and it has a concave back. Its large ears enable heat loss. Its upper lip and nose forms a trunk.
The trunk acts as a fifth limb, a sound amplifier and an important
method of touch. The African elephant's trunk ends in two opposing lips, whereas the Asian elephant trunk ends in a single lip.
African bush elephants are bigger than Asian elephants. Males stand
3.2–4.0 m (10–13 ft) tall at the shoulder and weigh 4,700–6,048 kg
(10,000–13,330 lb), while females stand 2.2–2.6 m (7.2–8.5 ft) tall and
weigh 2,160–3,232 kg (4,800–7,130 lb).
The largest individual recorded stood four metres to the shoulders and weighed ten tonnes
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