It can be used to smell, take a shower, and even to eat.
It can be used to smell, take a shower, and even to eat.
i love u britnay
A Trunk
a trunk
They dont, they blow it.
Proboscidea means "eats with nose". Elephants are the only members of this Order.
They sound like a trumpet. Either that or someone blowing their nose really loud or obnoxiously, which is basically what elephants do with their trunks to make the noise.
no,it would dehydrate them and ruin their kidney
Elephants have remorse for the dead and a good memory. If a member of an elephants family dies, then the surviving members will return to the site of the death every year to "mourn." Their trunks are also unique, being made up of 100,000 individual muscles.
They're called teeth. The extended upper incisors are called tusks.
trunk
yes
They dont, they blow it.
For elephants, the trunk is the same as a nose is to most animals. Breathing through the nose is natural. Breathing through the mouth is not comfortable.
Bunnies have paws, a nose, and whiskers.
They need to get the mucus out of their nose like us humans do.
Proboscidea means "eats with nose". Elephants are the only members of this Order.
There are a great many animals that have a long nose in the world such as the ant eater. Elephants also have long noses.
They sound like a trumpet. Either that or someone blowing their nose really loud or obnoxiously, which is basically what elephants do with their trunks to make the noise.
Yes. Elephants do drink water.They use their trunk (their nose). They pull the water up from the watering hole through their trunk and then spray it into their mouth.
Asian elephants are very alike to African elephants. Asian elephants have smaller ears. African elephants have huge ears. Asian elephants live in Asia, and are smaller than African elephants. African elephants live in Africa. However, they are usually the same color and they both have tusks made of ivory and a trunk for a nose. Now you know how to tell apart African and Asian elephants! There are only between 41,410 and 52,345 in the wild.