For the animal lovers, there is a full-fledged article on elephants, which are part of all temple festivals. |
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It is a member of a group called the deinotheres which were cousins to the elephants. |
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Thailand's beloved elephants need health care and skilled people to administer to the animals. |
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Serengeti also accommodate immense herds of buffaloes, elephants and giraffes, bubals, imapalas and Grant gazelles, hippos. |
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On the trek in we'd bob high through the green morass and snarl, chains rattling, as our elephants galumphed majestically through the foliage. |
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It's crucial that elephants allow these researchers to get up close so the animals can be darted and fitted with radio collars. |
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In the past farmers scared off elephants by beating drums or cracking whips. |
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There has been a rash of sightings of elephants roosting in trees that has left authorities shaken and dazed. |
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Nevertheless, this appears to be tempered by a wariness of creating costly white elephants on the Clydeside. |
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A lot of this spend, said IDC, will be on 3G networks, which have been dismissed in some quarters as expensive white elephants. |
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We could end up with a load of white elephants, huge stadia and pools, rather than local facilities. |
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Opponents say they will be hugely expensive white elephants which could cost taxpayers a fortune. |
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On April 23, Richard Lair conducted an orchestra of 12 elephants to rave reviews. |
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It has now become a major attraction for wild elephants, bison, hyena and boars. |
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African elephants at a Wiltshire safari park are to pack their trunks over fears the creatures could become too amorous. |
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The traditional inhabitants of the region, the nomadic, cattle-herding Maasai, have lived alongside elephants for centuries. |
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When the group arrived in the Masai area they camped out for the first four nights surrounded by lions, elephants and wildebeest. |
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He had to deal with sweltering humidity, torrential rainstorms, former Khmer Rouge warlords and mischievous monkeys and elephants. |
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The fatty digital cushion is smaller in the rear foot than the forefoot in both African and Asian elephants. |
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There have been villagers in other parts of Zambia mauled by lions, trampled underfoot by elephants and hippos. |
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Also, all prisoners will be freed and summarily trampled by wild elephants. |
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The sleek horses, cute lambs, elephants and a hippopotamus could be auditioning for kitschy animal calendars. |
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They have to contend with elephants, hippos, bushpigs, porcupines, vervet monkeys, baboons and birds which are after their crops. |
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Modern elephants and woolly mammoths share a common ancestor that split into separate species about 6 million years ago, the study reports. |
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Thousands of animals were killed, including tigers, lions, elephants, camels, and koalas. |
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The elephants are also slow to respond to a woman's voice as their hearing is tuned to following a male voice. |
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The article suggests that protecting elephants and their natural habitats would be a step to survival of the species. |
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The students will name and identify elephants and herds as well as dissecting droppings to help discover the animal's migratory patterns. |
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Having stayed in this land of elephants and snake charmers for twenty years now, I've become used to this inane exposition of sanctimoniousness. |
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This type of interaction occurs in horses, elephants, hyraxes, rodents, and lagomorphs but is probably best exemplified in the termites. |
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He is also said to have slain more than 2,000 elephants for their tusks and felled thousands of sandalwood trees. |
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Learn what you can do to help elephants, whales, sharks, parrots and other wildlife. |
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A total of six elephants broke free from their handlers while they were on parade at an amusement park. |
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They observed Asian elephants, both wild and captive, tearing off leafy side branches from trees or from unwieldy limbs already on the ground. |
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If you fancy the idea of walking in Botswana with a group of elephants, then Gavin Ford is your man. |
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In the first section of the tour, herbivorous animals such as deer, zebras and elephants are scattered over a dry, barren landscape. |
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Every day elephants bless thousands of Hindu devotees at temples all over India. |
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The herds and bands of elephants, horses, dancing girls and musicians, and scenes from the Ramayana come alive on the outer walls of the temple. |
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Afrotheria is a newly recognized taxon comprising elephants, hyraxes, sea cows, aardvarks, golden moles, tenrecs, and elephant shrews. |
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Here, photographers can get vantage points to compose shots of elephants, rhinos, cheetahs, hyenas, gazelles and waterbucks. |
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If we announced that we were in the market for fresh ivory, of course that would encourage the poaching of elephants. |
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This switch is darkly ironic, because hippos are now much rarer than African elephants. |
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The loud noise of rushing elephants resembled the roars of the clouds in the welkin, in the season of rains. |
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Lions and panthers sauntered in their enclosures in search of a cool shade while elephants basked for most part of the day in little ponds. |
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New DNA research reveals that woolly mammoths were more closely related to modern Asian elephants than to African elephants. |
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I had a scratch pack of twelve elephants, including some that had been sent forward from the keddahs. |
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African and Asian elephants are the only members of the Order Proboscidea that were not lost in the megafaunal crisis of the late Pleistocene. |
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Ancestors of cheetahs and lions and elephants existed in North America some 13,000 years ago. |
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Later, Scot and bassist Liebig are featured in a duet, and the two sound like a pair of elegant elephants doing a stately little dance. |
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Newly arrived penguins from South America will join the Safari Park elephants, tigers, lions, birds, tiglons and ligers. |
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Dating from 1465 to 1487, the Chenghua doucai jar bears the special tian mark and is decorated with red and yellow elephants dancing among waves. |
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In most of the temples, the elephants are kept in a secluded room, which has a cement floor. |
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Throughout the eighties and nineties, when he wasn't doing that, he was poaching protected tigers, bears, elephants, and barking deer. |
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Remaining motionless seems to enable elephants to focus their keen senses of smell and hearing on unfamiliar noises and odors in the air. |
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Later on the custom was abolished because vulgar people tittered and the dignity of the elephants or their mahouts was wounded. |
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The preserve is home to elephants, giraffes, zebra, and various species of antelope and monkey. |
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The visitors will be accorded a traditional welcome, complete with three caparisoned elephants and a panchavadyam performance. |
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The elephants, had, of course, knocked these down in their passage, so going downhill was one long slide and going up beggars description. |
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In the fight to protect both elephants and humans, the chemical agent capsaicin, found in chili peppers, is a secret weapon. |
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The haste to pass the area before dusk when elephants and bison come to the waterholes added anxiety to exhaustion. |
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There are tigers here, but it's elephants, monkeys and bison that you're most likely to see sipping at the reserve's lakes. |
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Today these are represented by the elephants, the sea cows, the elephant shrews, the golden moles, the tenrecs and the aardvark. |
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Watched by hundreds of devotees, the ritual would begin at 11.30 a.m. with a grand shower bath for all the 51 elephants. |
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Land mammals whose bones were excavated at Ogoloma include goats, cows, royal antelope, leopards, dogs, elephants, cats, and waterbuck. |
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Animals like tigers, rhinos and elephants are hunted for the high mercantile value they attract in the international markets. |
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The remains of forest elephants, rhinos, and a cave lion indicate that the climate was generally warmer than it is there today. |
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So, along with chemical signals and higher range trumpeting and shrieks, elephants have an extensive range of communication. |
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Five times a jackal barks in the cold season, and the elephants trumpet and donkeys bay many times more. |
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But we saw lots of keweel animals, and the elephants decided to put on a real show, trumpeting and running around their compound. |
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Later, the chorus was taken up by elephants trumpeting as they came down to drink. |
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The elephants nosed their trunks toward the stream, taking sips with two finger-like appendages. |
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The mammals investigate remains with their feet and trunks, paying special attention to the skulls and tusks of even long-dead elephants. |
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Living with elephants and giraffes, and seeing lions hunt and kill, was fantastic. |
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In contrast, zoo elephants are typically found in groups of two, and two-thirds of female calves are taken from their mothers at an early age. |
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These forests still support tigers, Asian elephants, gaur, tapirs, Sumatran rhinoceros, and the spectacular and endemic crested argus. |
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Among the animals would be the elephants, performing sea lions, lions, llamas, and Argentine ponies, dogs and a comedy chimpanzee. |
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The lore holds that elephants can get drunk by eating the fermented fruit rotting on the ground. |
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Bull elephants are targeted because, unlike African elephants, only male Asian elephants produce tusks. |
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A quarter of all Asian elephants are held in captivity, including 9-15 per cent of the total population of the Sumatran subspecies. |
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Of the 300 African and Asian elephants in AZA zoos, only 17 will be left in 50 years, one study predicts, and those will be too old to breed. |
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After that I didn't want to work with any animals other than Asian elephants. |
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The finding is significant because it makes Borneo's 2,000 or so Asian elephants one of the highest priority populations for conservation. |
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Humans have been killing elephants for their ivory tusks for more than 4,000 years. |
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The elephant stock at Punnathoor Kotta comprises six cow elephants, two makhna or mozha and 54 bulls or tuskers. |
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Some live out their circus fantasies by taming lions or elephants, but aerial acts combine macho cool and athletic grace. |
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Hundreds of thousands of elephants were illegally poached and their tusks sold for profits. |
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The government has lost control of the eastern parts of the country and poachers freely hunt down elephants for their ivory. |
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The drum beat gets faster and faster, the elephants are hoovering food, and the blue-suited mahouts whirl in the rain like dervishes. |
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The elephants are taught to paint by their mahouts, who give them a paintsoaked brush and guide their trunks over large pieces of paper. |
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Included in the project were health check-ups for the elephants and safety training for mahouts and proprietors. |
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All around us, elephants were scampering in all directions raising a lot of dust metres high. |
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Sadly, elephants cost too much nowadays, and my skywriting isn't what it was. |
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Many herbivores, including the elephants of today, are exceptionally strong swimmers. |
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That the sounds are musical to our ears may say more about us than about the elephants. |
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They were farouche, romantic characters riding arrogantly through the gardens on their massive elephants. |
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So when confronted with a hill, elephants prefer to take a detour along level terrain, the researchers conclude. |
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This peninsula also shelters sea lions and sea elephants, whose male members openly struggle to seize their females during the breeding season. |
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These elephants stand throughout the day in the burning sun with heavy chains on their legs. |
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Because the elephants aren't afraid of the tigers, the tigers aren't afraid of elephants. |
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The forests supported tigers, elephants, wild boar, oxen, and deer, as well as wildfowl. |
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Unlike elephants and bushpigs, hippos are not quick to apply any initiative. |
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A guard with a motorcycle and a shotgun could move through fields at night and work with farmers to scare elephants and hippos. |
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Like elephants, hippos and bushpigs, porcupines are nocturnal crop raiders. |
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Leopards, cheetahs, elephants, hippos and polar bears are being killed in unprecedented numbers. |
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Twenty-two days spent tracking elephants, hippopotamuses, and crocodiles in the Okavango Delta. |
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Mozambique a great diversity of animal life, including zebras, water buffalo, elephants, giraffes, lions, hippopotami, and crocodiles. |
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Animals with relatively short distal bones, such as elephants and hippopotamuses, have more columnar legs and do little running. |
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Two more elephants are believed to have succumbed to the disease on Sunday. |
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The current elephant population in the provincial area is around 300 elephants. |
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More often than not, temple elephants kept in chains and overfed without enough exercise become fat. |
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Initially 41 female elephants were darted, radio collared and injected with the contraceptive vaccine. |
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The expedition also reported the existence of the Sumatran rhinoceros in the park, as well as elephants. |
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The twin elephants were popular attractions with tourists at the Khao Kheow Open Zoo. |
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Other animals photographed included elephants, sun bears, porcupines, clouded leopards, wild dogs, and panthers. |
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Rowena saw monkeys, zebras, elephants, a group of vivid but lazy sun bears. |
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The Government also asked private owners of four elephants in the city to send their pachyderms to the camp. |
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Protected species such as elephants, gorillas and chimpanzees are prized, but illegal, pieces of meat. |
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There have been cases of young translocated elephants goring rhino and attacking cars. |
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The 99-year-old circus has pitched tents here with about 300 staff and a horde of animals, including elephants, horses, parrots and dogs. |
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Conservationists say 120,000 elephants are now trapped in Botswana, with no natural routes to follow back to the river. |
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Five African elephants will be re-homed in France because they have become too hot to handle. |
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He was also accused of killing thousands of elephants for their tusks and smuggling ivory and sandalwood worth millions of dollars. |
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Major problems confronting CITES have resulted from the highly lucrative trade in the ivory from tusks of elephants. |
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He said there were not many captive elephants in Thailand with decent sized tusks to provide legal ivory to the market. |
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Currently, Namibia has over 40 tonnes of ivory, mostly from elephants killed in other countries and seized in Namibia while in transit. |
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Ivory-producing states argue that the sale of legal ivory can offset the considerable costs associated with elephants. |
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We saw tigers, too, as close as you like from the swaying perch of the howdah on the back of the elephants. |
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He never showed much interest in the number of departmental female elephants around and never sired a calf. |
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It lets hyenas crush carcasses with their jaws and enables elephants to support their massive bodies. |
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From the molecular viewpoint, however, the phylogenetic relationship among elephants, sirenians, and hyraxes remains confused. |
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The elephants are in an enclosure surrounded by an electric fence and guards will monitor them on horseback and from speed boats. |
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The zoo offices were once the airport club house and the old hangers are now used as the living area of a giraffe and the Indian elephants. |
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The first time I ever saw Indian elephants in the wild, it took me ten minutes to identify them. |
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Not long after this, at about noon, we heard the elephants feeding in front, and we crept forward. |
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Furthermore, unlike the curved teeth of elephants and warthogs, the narwhal tooth is nature's only straight tusk. |
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There were grazing giraffes, ostriches and above all, these wonderful elephants. |
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Towards the end of the Miocene, modern cats and the first elephants arrived on the scene. |
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What about tigers, elephants and ducks listening to a chorus of frogs singing happily? |
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Tigers, elephants and a few others animals still roam there and along the borders. |
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They will visit Nairobi Nursery, where the smallest orphaned elephants and rhinos are kept. |
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You used to get lions and tigers and seals with ball skills and elephants giving slow rides to juggling monkeys. |
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Herds of elephants stroll past as lions hide in bushes eyeing up a feast of zebras. |
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The zoo is really cool and we saw all the favourites the best of which were lemurs, elephants and the zebras of course. |
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He referred to past incidents involving elephants that have created bad publicity. |
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His notoriety first spread as the poacher of wild elephants for their precious tusks. |
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There are no elephants, but there was once something like an ostrich but much, much bigger, called the elephant bird. |
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Her idea was that elephants were machines of destruction and embodiments of terror. |
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At the end of the tour the guide kindly requests the tourists not to feed any elephants when they are seen on the roads. |
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The collection of paintings include performing horses, elephants, sheep, hyenas, snakes, birds and a guinea pig. |
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A cruise on the river Chobe provides sightings of elephants in water, Nile crocodiles and on the river-bank will be lions. |
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There are leopard, buffalo, elephants and wild dogs, however, so one needs to be wary. |
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The older Flores tools were found among remains of dwarf elephants, Komodo dragons, rats, and other animals, according to the paper. |
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Its 2500 domesticated Asian elephants are the only survivors from around 100,000 last century. |
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Another factor that could cause more problems for the elephants, and thus the people, is the ongoing conversion of some coffee estates to tea. |
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More than a hundred elephants were reported to have escaped from the forest into the coffee estates nearby. |
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Important studies on elephants, gorillas, chimpanzees and rare and elusive ungulates such as the okapi and duiker have been ongoing for decades. |
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Insurance companies offered policies to cover cattle, poultry, sheep, goats, horses, elephants, dogs, ducks and fishes. |
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Beavers fell trees, elephants trample plants, ants strip trees of bark, moles dig tunnels, and so the list goes on. |
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Its game species include elephants, springbok, kudu, oryx, ostrich, and numerous endemic species of birds. |
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On the other hand elephants modify the landscape as they are forest or woodland clearers, path makers and diggers of water pools. |
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It was a dwarf species located on the Indonesian island of Flores, which it shared with pigmy elephants and Komodo dragons. |
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The species lived with pygmy elephants and giant lizards on a remote island in Indonesia. |
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It'll take more than a few shots of Wild Turkey or 99 Bananas before you start seeing pink elephants. |
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For the remainder of the night the unsteady trumpeting of the elephants echoed through the forest as the pixilated herd acted out their binge. |
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This beautiful playsuit is covered in pink and red elephants, with pink, red and white striped arms. |
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Could the British press have discovered a curious tendency for elephants with a death wish to form groups of 280, or was this a coincidence? |
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When he does, will he play the party game and try to pretend the elephants aren't there? |
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The geophone is capable of tracking not only elephants, but also other large mammals, including giraffes and lions. |
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In your proposal you talk about cheetahs hunting pronghorn and elephants grazing Great Plains grasslands. |
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She loved the elephants and spent a good ten minutes pointing and making elephant noises. |
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The sale of new ivory was banned in 1989 to curb the slaughter of elephants in Africa. |
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The good news is that mice can scare elephants, and that happens from time to time. |
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On watching the footage, you start to believe that elephants may indeed be as intelligent as the great apes. |
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We have come to realize that controlling elephants through domination and the use of ankuses can no longer be justified. |
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We saw herds of elephants, impala, water buffalo, antelope, and a leap of leopards. |
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The Northern immigrants to South America included the rodents, Carnivora, llamas and horses, bovids, and the tapirs and elephants. |
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There were rodents, bats, elephants and lemurs with pointed snouts and long tails. |
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It's been observed in many other bird species besides parrots and macaws, as well as elephants, macaques, giraffes, rhinos and chimpanzees. |
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He commands elephants, wrestles rhinos, and kills lions and crocodiles with his bare hands. |
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The firm, which provides a one-stop shop for cattle housing, supplied housing for elephants and rhinos at the park. |
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We forbid the sale of goods made from endangered species such as elephants and rhino. |
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But when you look at the amount of weight they can lift in proportion to their body size, elephants are wimps compared to rhinoceros beetles. |
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Why are we not aware of the ridiculous amounts spent on such white elephants? |
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Together they romp with the animals of the African savannah, particularly the elephants and a trio of cheetah cubs. |
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The placental mammals include such diverse forms as whales, bats, elephants, shrews, and armadillos. |
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Even the emperor's throne, the bejeweled peacock throne of Shah Jahan, was packed on elephants and carried away to Persia. |
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The ornate sets include 30 ft bejeweled elephants, a unique red stage and three miles of gold tiling. |
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This weekend bonanza got off to a flying start when the guests were welcomed in the royal traditional style, garlanded and saluted by elephants. |
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Could the Asian elephant fulfill the same ecological role that elephants played here 13,000 years ago? |
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They found that Asian elephants in European zoos typically live about 15 years, only half as long as elephants in timber camps. |
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The Asian elephant featured strongly in Buddhism and Brahminism and the elephants were tamed and domesticated to be able to be used efficiently. |
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According to the narrator, who obviously loves his elephants, Asian elephants are also far more intelligent than their African brothers. |
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Animals such as elephants also use infrasound to communicate over long distances or as weapons to repel foes. |
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Their barks and branches freshly ripped, showing where the elephants have browsed during the night and daylight hours. |
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Wild cats, buffaloes, bears and elephants would all be kept and then made to fight one another. |
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In addition, the teams surveyed the numbers of other plants and animals including endangered golden monkeys, elephants, and forest buffalo. |
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Camels, elephants and regular drought animals like the bullocks also are brought on to roads to draw the attention of voters. |
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Most of these captive elephants live in dirty conditions and suffer from poor treatment and callous management. |
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The thunder belonged to a herd of baby elephants who began to bunt the walls. |
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As a specialty dancer for Ziegfeld she performed backward walkovers leading the elephants on to the stage. |
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What if we returned not just mustangs and burros but also elephants and lions to our continent's wilds? |
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When asked what he is doing, he explains that he is driving away elephants. |
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Again there are at least 15 pictures of caparisoned elephants, horses, infantry and jemadars and the royal couple in action. |
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Ortland has always had more hide than a team of elephants, and he is nobody's fool, but he is looking for someone to adopt him. |
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Forest elephants spent a night stripping the field of what would have been a six-month supply of cowpeas. |
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The circus is coming, and it has nothing to do with soleil, shriners or tormented crackpot elephants! |
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Tigers, lions and elephants are regarded as auspicious animals and appear on paintings and frescoes. |
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Lions, leopards, elephants and giraffes roam the game reserves, and to see them in the flesh is a marvellous experience. |
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So you can find prints with subjects you normally would not expect on Japanese woodblock prints like Indian elephants or a mountain landscape in Alaska. |
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They study elephants to try to determine the habits of woolly mammoths, which is useful I suppose, but there is no way to prove there is a correlation. |
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For years conservationists have fought to protect South Africa's elephants from poachers and hunters, but now it seems that they may have been too successful. |
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For more than 200 years, the high value of ivory and other elephant products have made hunting and poaching ongoing facts of life for elephants, both in Africa and in Asia. |
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By daybreak, the elephants were gone, and in their place came a troupe of perhaps 60 baboons, some descending from the mopane trees to lift anything moveable. |
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The tiny humans, who had skulls about the size of grapefruits, lived with pygmy elephants and Komodo dragons on a remote island in Indonesia 18,000 years ago. |
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Using calls that have infrasonic fundamental frequencies, female elephants are able to communicate with large numbers of specific individuals over long distances. |
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Papa's Yorkshire terrier was tied in the truck bed and when one of the elephants walked by, the dog snarled and snapped, straining at the end of her chain. |
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You've got elephants, giraffes, carousels and merry go-rounds. |
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The 50,000 acres of land at Gourlays Ranch is a recognised wildlife conservancy, home to thousands of animals including elephants, leopards, sables and kudus. |
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The elephants had killed the trees by uprooting and debarking them. |
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The western part of Kenya's largest national park boasts the Mzima crystal springs, a haven for hippos, elephants, gazelles, zebras, and giraffes. |
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These folks lived on the Indonesian island of Flores, happily hunting pygmy elephants and giant rats, until a volcano did them in about 12,000 years ago. |
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Sirenians are members of the group known as subungulates, thought to be distantly related to hyraxes, elephants, and perhaps, artiodactyls and perissodactyls. |
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After having reached a level of 1,000 feet, the expedition was compelled to abandon its elephants, throw away its baggage and climb further by means of cords and pulleys. |
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The chirps are made by Asian elephants but not by African elephants. |
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For most visitors, the highlights of the trip are watching zookeepers bottle-feed the infants, and watching dozens of elephants cool off in the Maha Oya River. |
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They blew clouds of fishy breath our way and rumbled like elephants. |
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Africans are the park rangers protecting the elephants and other wildlife from violent criminal poaching networks. |
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Beijing claims to oppose the illicit traffic in the tusks of elephants butchered by poachers. |
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We see herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically across the plains, elephants romping in the distance, and breathtaking shots of mountains and valleys. |
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The weaker members were trussed up and tied to the backs of the elephants. |
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The elephants are shovelling great trunkfuls of fruit into their mouths. |
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Populations of species with large individuals, such as elephants, have a low biotic potential while those of small individuals, such as bacteria and insects, have a high biotic potential. |
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As this was going on, a clown dressed in a prisoner uniform was led out by two baby elephants, their tiny trunks holding him by his powder white gloves. |
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Afrotheria are conceived as a long-distinct clade endemic to Africa, and including elephant shrews, golden moles, aardvarks, elephants, sirenians, and hyraxes. |
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The size of dinosaurs, whales, and elephants should serve as an example. |
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Whatever elephants Montserratians were to be given there, the gold, silver or brass plating would be paid for by the budget of another government department. |
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Add up all the lions, elephants, warthogs, giraffes, gazelles, zebras, impalas, topis and hyenas that live on these plains and they fail to outnumber the gnus. |
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They were elephants, of course, and had been tutored by two biped Russian artists, Alex Melamid and Vitaly Komar. |
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The loud trumpeting is resulting in the elephants fleeing in panic. |
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Last year he experimented with honeybees, placing hives around fields in the hopes that the stinging insects would deter elephants from raiding crops. |
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Rabbits, horses, and elephants chew tough grasses, leaves, and plants. |
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In describing elephants, anthropomorphic terms are unavoidable. |
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There was a game reserve in South Africa in which a herd of elephants suddenly exhibited uncharacteristic, senseless violence and destructiveness. |
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Furnishings in this vein incorporate exotic materials such as bamboo, wicker, rattan, banana bark and motifs of monkeys, elephants, camels and palm leaves. |
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There were once more than 300 species within the family, known as proboscideans, but today only Asian elephants and African elephants still exist. |
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Changes are also being introduced in the diet pattern and bread is being removed to bring in rice and milk, which is being given to monkeys, rhinos and elephants. |
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Although bull elephants spend a lot of time alone, they regularly meet up and renew their friendships, one of their favourite meeting places being around water holes. |
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In Asia, domesticated elephants are still used in the logging industry. |
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Thailand has about 2,000-2,500 domesticated Asian elephants. |
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If fermented fruit on the ground is out of the question, so too is the notion that the fruit could ferment in the stomach of elephants, the study authors say. |
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Once free, it's entirely likely the King of the Jungle and his trusty herd of elephants will save the day by laying a smackdown on the hostile tribe. |
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Conflicts between farmers and elephants have long been widespread in Africa, where pachyderms nightly destroy crops, raid grain houses, and sometimes kill people. |
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The traditional place to see Asian elephants in the wild is India, where about 80 national parks and 440 sanctuaries provide a host of opportunities for wildlife viewing. |
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Located between Teesta and Mahananda rivers, the forest has rich wildlife, including elephants, Indian gaurs, spotted deer, barking deer, leopards and even Bengal tigers. |
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You'll camp on sandbars and islands, travel through three national parks, and watch elephants, zebras, kudus, and water bucks lazing along the shoreline. |
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Stylists at Cartoon Cuts wash as well as cut their customers' hair, dousing the suds with hoses that emanate from the trunks of green fiberglass elephants. |
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While it's well known that many modern large animals, including Indian elephants, can swim, sauropods have long been viewed as bulky leviathans in a class of their own. |
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Ringling Bros. says the ankus, or bull hook, is used to guide elephants like a leash or a set of reins, not to cause pain or discomfort as activists insist. |
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Because poachers had obviously selected individuals for their tusks, the percentage of the elephants remaining without tusks had greatly increased. |
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He said that it must be remembered that elephants are not naturally tame. |
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But human beings, let alone elephants, find brutalism hard to love. |
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The region is rich in biodiversity and also home to about 50 tigers, hundreds of wild Indian elephants, Indian bison, leopards, and many types of birds. |
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Dense jungle alternates with steamy rice paddies and, as pineapple groves give way to coconut plantations, working elephants come briefly into view. |
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A while ago some elephants got loose in Seoul and went on a rampage. |
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The lines formed into elephants chewing sugarcane, tigers prowling and lions growling and then colour was filled to bring alive the green surroundings of the zoo. |
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We rode elephants, watched a rice farmer plant his crops, visited a rubber plantation, went golfing, swam in the ocean and ate delicious Thai food. |
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He examines ancient texts on elephants and the Mughal miniatures. |
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Strictly speaking, the term should be applied only to the tusks of elephants, although a wider definition includes the teeth of the hippo, narwhal whale and the walrus. |
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The hot spot is home to important populations of numerous large birds and mammals, including vultures, tigers, elephants, rhinos, and wild water buffalo. |
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Back then they were taking ivory from elephants and walruses. |
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Many of those same Carnegie libraries have now become white elephants. |
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He said international Olympic chiefs are anxious that no projects be undertaken in London if there is a risk of them becoming white elephants after the Games. |
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The second pellet bounced of several walls, a reproduction print of some elephants and a strategically opened door and embedded itself in my knee. |
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Within a few decades, orangutans, Asian elephants, Sumatran tigers, Chilean flamingos, Amur leopards, and many other well-known species will likely disappear from the wild. |
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A brief trawl through the great white elephants of recent years should be enough to sound alarm bells so loud the so-called London 2012 Olympic team will pack up and go home. |
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Fences are being torn down and on my own ranch squatters have snared 2000 impalas, 365 other antelopes, 20 zebras, two cheetahs, two elephants and one wild dog. |
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Sirenians belong to a group called subungulates, which includes elephants and hyraxes, two animals that by appearances and habitat would seem to have nothing in common. |
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We got held up by a herd of elephants in no hurry to cross the road. |
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Write letters to the Environment Ministry to persuade officials to protect elephants in their own homes, stop visiting animal circuses and avoid elephant rides. |
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The elephants were in a deep nullah, hidden among the reeds and cane. |
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Cambodia was once home to herds of elephants, possibly thousands of tigers, wild cattle, leopards, bears, barking deer and an array of other animals. |
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In much of southern Africa elephants are protected in national parks. |
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In lower latitudes, mastodons and elephants, giant deer and ox, beavers, dogs and cats, and other familiar species existed in the forests and grasslands. |
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Even so, every walk in a jungle where wild elephants, rhinos, buffaloes or tigers roam, is a tense experience, even if you do have an armed forest guard along with you. |
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While some 100,000 elephants ranged across the country at the beginning of the 20th century, less than 5,000 domesticated and wild elephants survive today. |
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General Slim listed carrier pigeons, dogs, ponies, mules, horses, bullocks, buffaloes, and elephants as all being used by his Fourteenth Army in the Burma campaign. |
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A big mahalo to Adrienne LaFrance for her well-written and informative article exploring issues associated with confinement of elephants at Honolulu Zoo. |
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They were herbivorous and are closely related to modern Indian elephants. |
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While at a Kenyan beach resort last month they decided to return to the Maasai Mara animal reserves to see animals such as giraffes, lions and elephants. |
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One of Sumatra's single largest remaining blocks of lowland forest, Tesso Nilo is also home to a wide range of wildlife, including elephants, tigers, gibbons and tapirs. |
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As a bonus, the elephants are in a place that helps educate the public on the need for habitat protection, resource management, and wildlife conservation. |
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The Kingdom Animalia, from sponges to elephants, velvet worms to octopuses, mud dragons to tardigrades, is the best studied and most widely appreciated of the kingdoms. |
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Zari parasols, richly caparisoned elephants, glittering gold-embossed palanquins and symbols like Mount Meru and the mighty Garuda became royal symbols of Indonesia. |
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The mayor explained to the mahouts who cooperated well that the elephants would be sent to Pattaya Elephant Village for a period not exceeding three months. |
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In the dead of night, the caparisoned elephants illuminated by the dancing flames of torches and surrounded by the aroma of burning oil assume an almost ethereal look. |
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The animals protected by I-1401 include elephants, rhinos, lions, tigers, leopards, cheetahs, marine turtles, pangolins, sharks and rays. |
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Cassius Dio relates that he brought war elephants and heavy armaments which would have overawed any remaining native resistance. |
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Birds and animals, including cows, cranes, dogs, eagles, elephants, pheasants, monkeys and puppies, were popular. |
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Chobe National Park, found in the Chobe District, has the world's largest concentration of African elephants. |
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The extinction of the dwarf hippos and dwarf elephants has been linked to the earliest arrival of humans on Malta. |
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