no not in a barn. only in the wild .
No, broken walrus tusks do not grow back. Once a tusk is broken or lost, it cannot regenerate. Tusks are elongated canine teeth, and while walruses can maintain their overall dental health, any damage to the tusks is permanent.
It depends. 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
Yes.
no
The males grow tusks and on occasion so do some females.
Barn
Yes
They are long(can grow to 6 feet!)and white. Though sometimes their tusks can break in a fight. The tusks are actually teeth.
Walruses typically develop their tusks when they are around 15 months old, but the tusks grow more prominently as they mature. Male walruses usually have larger tusks, which can grow up to three feet long, and they continue to grow throughout the animal's life. Female walruses also have tusks, though they are generally shorter and less robust. The tusks serve various purposes, including helping with feeding, social interactions, and establishing dominance.
The typical seal does not have tusks, walruses do,but others, no.Walrus tusks can grow 2 to 4 feet in length, using them as ice picks.
54%
500 ft!!!!!!!!!!!