they have long tusks because they can have epic sword tusks fights
The likely word is the plural noun tusks (large exterior dentition as in elephants and walruses)
Tusks really are teeth. They're sharp, long, and curved. They stick out beyond the mouths of such animals that have them: elephants, narwhals, walruses, and wild boars.
Walruses look like huge seals but have long whiskers and big tusks.
All mammals including you have ivory teeth. Some such as elephants and walruses have teeth large enough for it to have commercial value.
Walruses are living organisms, so yes.
Walruses are fat because the blubber helps with cold temperatures and also if you've watched videos with polar bears and walruses, it helps protect them from the bears claws and teeth and also from attacks from other walrus tusks. walruses swim in frigid cold waters so having an extra layer would be helpful.
The male wild boar, the Narwhal, and the elephant are a few.
Walrus tusks are the long, protruding teeth that can grow up to three feet in length. These tusks are actually elongated canine teeth, and both male and female walruses have them, although males tend to have larger tusks. They use their tusks for various purposes, including defense, dominance displays, and helping to haul themselves out of the water onto ice or land.
On average, they are about 36 centimeters, or 14 inches, but can grow to be as long as 100 centimeters, or 39 inches. Both males and females have these tusks, but the male's tusks are normally longer and thicker than the female's.
brown with long tusks
about 1 foot - 2 feet
Elephants, hippos, boars, a certain kind of deer, walruses, narwhals. A tusk is an especially large tooth, so animals with really big teeth are sometimes identified as "tusked," sometimes not.