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  1. 21 de dic. de 2010 · Scientists from Harvard Medical School, the University of Illinois, and the University of York in the United Kingdom used genetic analysis to prove that the African savanna elephant and the smaller African forest elephant have been largely separated for several million years.

  2. 6 de feb. de 2023 · The elephant herd can split into several smaller herds (or “elephant units”) if the group is too big. Contents show. Every elephant needs a herd. There are a number of reasons as to why an elephant needs to belong to a herd. The primary reasons are for shelter, safety, and to feel secure.

  3. 21 de dic. de 2010 · Savannah and forest elephants have been separated for at least three million years, they say, and are as distinct from each other as Asian elephants are from the extinct woolly mammoth....

  4. 23 de ago. de 2001 · But scientists have apparently overlooked an entire species: In the 24 August issue of Science, a team of researchers shows that forest- and savanna-dwelling elephants, currently lumped together in a single species called Loxodonta africana, each merits its own species name.

  5. 25 de mar. de 2021 · Evidence has been building since the early 2000s that forest and savanna elephants should be split taxonomically into two species. In 2008, when the IUCN issued its last assessment of African...

  6. 23 de feb. de 2014 · It's Time to Accept That Elephants, Like Us, Are Empathetic Beings. Elephants help each other in distress, grieve for their dead, and feel the same emotions as each other—just like us.