it's tusks and ears
The elephant's tusks and ears. The possessive noun is in bold.
their trunk, tusks, flat feet, large ears
Unlike Asian Elephants they have tusks and are much bigger.
African elephants use tusks as weapons (and sometimes as digging tools), ears for both hearing and cooling, and the trunk is used to pick things up and move them around as needed, and also as a hose (elephants like to bathe).
Many mammals have tusks, including elephants, boars, and of course, narwhals.
The most telling difference is the size of their ears and the presence of tusks. African elephants have much larger, more rounder ears than Asian elephants do, and tend to be able to have tusks more often. Asian elephants, on the other hand, have much smaller and more square or triangle-shaped ears (which ever shape you prefer) than African elephants do. A tusked Asian elephant (called Tuskas) is more rare than an Asian elephant with no tusks.
Female African Elephants have small tusks while Male African Elephants have large tusks. In Asian Elephants, only the males have tusks. Females have very small or no tusks at all. Even among male elephants, the African Male's tusks are much larger than the Asian Males tusks
Elephants are big and grey, The African elephant have big ears and the Asian elephant have small ears. the Asian elephants are also smaller. they have long trunks and tails.
No, not all elephants have tusks. Female Asian Elephants, for example, do not have tusks.
Yes, if you are referring to the tusks belonging to many elephants. If the tusks belong to one elephant, it would be 'elephant's'.
All elephants have tusks, with and exception of the Female Asian elephants.