The family will consist of an older matriarch, her daughters (usually about 3 or 4 of them) and their calves. A typical elephant family usually comprises 6 to 12 individual elephants, but can expand to a larger group of 20.
Elephant groups are usually a family group of females and young bulls, with an older female in charge. Young bulls usually leave the family group and join forces with similar young males. Breeding bulls tend to be solitary, and move between the herds for breeding.
Yes they do... Each herd is led by an adult female - the Matriarch. Although adult male elephants leave the group, juveniles and female elephants stay within the herd. Care of the youngsters is shared among the adult 'family'.
Yes, they do. The elephants stay together as a family and they aunts also help the mother take care of the baby elephant.
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Yes, a dominant female leads a pack of elephants. She is known as the dominant matriarchal cow. She uses verbal and nonverbal communication to lead.
They stay in a pack they do not live alone
Female elephants (cows) live in herds while the male elephants (bulls) leave the herd after several years and travel alone
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their are 50 otters in one pack
none or one
four
Yes, if you are referring to the tusks belonging to many elephants. If the tusks belong to one elephant, it would be 'elephant's'.
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There are 20 cigarettes in one pack