• Status
    Endangered
  • Population
    Fewer than 50,000
  • Scientific Name
    Elephas maximus indicus
  • Height
    6.5–11.5 feet
  • Weight
    Around 11,000 pounds
  • Length
    Around 21 feet
  • Habitats
    Forests

The Asian elephant is the largest land mammal on the Asian continent. They inhabit dry to wet forest and grassland habitats in 13 range countries spanning South and Southeast Asia. While they have preferred forage plants, Asian elephants have adapted to surviving on resources that vary based on the area.

Asian elephants are extremely sociable, forming groups of six to seven related females that are led by the oldest female, the matriarch. Like African elephants, these groups occasionally join others to form larger herds, although these associations are relatively short-lived. In Asia, elephant herd sizes are significantly smaller than those of savannah elephants in Africa.

More than two-thirds of an elephant's day may be spent feeding on grasses, but it also eats large amounts of tree bark, roots, leaves, and small stems. Cultivated crops such as bananas, rice, and sugarcane are favorite foods. Elephants are always close to a source of fresh water because they need to drink at least once a day.

In Asia, humans have had close associations with elephants over many centuries, and elephants have become important cultural icons. According to Hindu mythology, the gods (deva) and the demons (asura) churned the oceans in a search for the elixir of life so that they would become immortal. As they did so, nine jewels surfaced, one of which was the elephant. In Hinduism, the powerful deity honored before all sacred rituals is the elephant-headed Lord Ganesha, who is also called the Remover of Obstacles.

Browse Photos & Videos

Elephant herd walks through tea garden in Assam, India

 

Asian Elephant

Bornean elephant (Elephas maximus borneensis) crossing a road. Danum Valley Conservation Area, Sabah, North Borneo, Malaysia. The Bornean elephants are found only in the northeast tip of Borneo, in the Malaysian state of Sabah. In June 2005 a team from the Sabah Wildlife Department in Malaysia and WWF's Borneo office were collaring five Bornean elephants. It was the first time anyone has ever studied Borneo's elephants. It will be the largest study ever done to track Asian elephants via satellite. It was not until 2003 that the Bornean elephant had been scientifically recognized as a sub-species in 2003.

 

Sumatran Elephant

Sumatran elephant, (Elephas maximus sumatrensis) a member of Flying Squad in Tesso Nilo National Park, Riau, Indonesia

 

Asian Elephant

Asian Elephant--The largest population of Asian Elephant in Cambodia may occur in Mondulkiri province. Camera-trap photos and sign surveys indicate a healthy population with reproduction occurring. However given the encroachment of human settlement and agriculture
into forest areas human elephant conflict is likely to become a significant problem in the future.