the African elephant eats bugs, bark, roots,leaves and fruit
Yes.
An African elephant uses its trunk to grab and pick up food, then brings it to its mouth to eat. It can consume a variety of plants, fruits, and even tree bark using its trunk and large molars. African elephants are herbivores and need to eat a large quantity of food to sustain their massive size.
One difference is that African elephants have the bigger ears. They are also slightly bigger in size that Indian elephants. African elephants also have two "fingers" at the end of there trunk while Indian elephants only have one and African elephants are more grey while Idian elephants are more of a dusty colour.
There are two major species which are the African elephant and the Asian elephant.There are also Sri Lankan, Indian, Borneo pygmy, Forest, African savanna, and Sumatran elephants.
Zoos typically have African elephants and Asian elephants. African elephants are the larger of the two species and have larger ears, while Asian elephants have smaller, rounded ears. Both species can be found in zoos around the world.
leaves plants Elephants are vegetarians.
Plants
Yes.
Yes.
lions probly
No because they are herbivores.
furtilisation roots
African elephants can be eaten by lions, but I don't know if any other big cats eat them too.
of course they do. If they didn't, they couldn't survive in the wild. African Elephants eat tree leaves, among other things.
African elephants don't hunt. They are herbivores, which means they only eat plants. Their diet includes grasses, leaves, branches, tree bark, and fruits and vegetables. Elephants eat 6% of their body weight every day.
because they feel like it okay
African elephants are herbivores. They eat roots, grasses, fruit, and bark. An adult African elephant can eat up to 134 kilograms of food in a day.An African Elephant pretty much just leavesA African elephant mostly eats leaves and grass. It can drink about 190 liters of water a day! Some can drink about 230 liters! Imagine if we could drink that. I'd be so slippery.