The strongest animal relative to its size is the __, which can lift 1,141 times its weight. | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Number of species of elephants: African savanna (bush), African forest, and Asian | 3 |
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| | Percentage of a lion's body made up of skeletal muscle, the highest of any mammal | 58.8 |
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| How fast (in miles per hour) an elephant's trunk can suck water | 330 |
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| | Year Jean de Brunhoff wrote "Histoire de Babar," starring an elephant in the titular role | 1931 |
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| The elephant's closest living relatives look nothing like it. |
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From their gargantuan size to their matriarchal social structure, elephants are truly unique creatures in the animal kingdom. In fact, their closest living biological relatives look nothing like them — one lives in the sea, and the other weighs only about 10 pounds. Sirenians, known less elegantly as "sea cows" (which includes manatees and dugongs), share a common ancestor group with elephants, one that died out around 50 million years ago and was likely a wading animal that lived near water. The elephant's other close relative, the rock hyrax (Procavia capensis), looks more like a rodent than any sort of lumbering land giant. However, upon closer inspection, the rock hyrax and elephant do share similar toes, wrists, and skull structures. The rock hyrax also has oversized incisors that act similar to elephant tusks. When it comes to nature, there's always much more than meets the eye. | |
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