Yes, some elephants live in rainforests. The African forest elephant lives in the rainforest of Africa. The Asiatic elephant lives in a variety of habitats in Asia, one of which is rainforest.
on the forest floor
no because the elephant lives in the Savannah and the leopards live in the tropical rain forest
No, they are on the African savanna.
The African elephant lives in Africa, south of the Sahara desert in tropical forests, Savannah areas, deserts and river valleys
Elephants typically live in savannas and forests in Africa and Asia, not in the tropical rainforest. There are no wild elephant populations in the Amazon rainforest, for example.
There are two types of elephants that live in the African savannah. There's the African elephant, or Savannah elephant (as it is sometimes called), and then there's a subspecies called the Forest elephant. The Savannah elephant is larger than the Forest elephant and has tusks that curve outwards whereas the tusks of the Forest elephant are much straighter and point slightly downwards. Forest elephants are also darker than Savannah elephants.
There are only two species of elephants, the African elephant and the Asian elephant. There is some evidence that the African bush elephants and the African forest elephants are separate species, however, they both live in sub-Saharan Africa. Asian elephants live in South Asia and Southeast Asia.
The African forest elephants live Africa's forests. They are commonly found in Central and West African forests and they can live up to 70 years old.
the gibbon lives in the tropical rain forest
There are three species of elephant alive today. Two, the African bush elephant and the African forest elephant, live in Africa. The third, the Asiatic elephant, lives in rainforests, woodlands, and savannas of southern Asia.
Tropical Rainforest