The elephants of the Congo may seem quiet, but throughout their jungle home they rumble to each other in a frequency too low for human ears. Watch this clip from BBC wildlife documentary 'Jungle' t...
The elephants of the Congo may seem quiet, but throughout their jungle home they rumble to each other in a frequency too low for human ears. Watch this clip from BBC wildlife documentary 'Jungle' too see what an elephant's rumble sounds like!
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I think it is the cyclotis. The scientific name is wrong, it is not seen as a subspecies anymore but a species on its own. As you can see these elephants are substantially shorter than the ones you can see on the savannah. I suspect all of the forest(jungle...) dwelling elephants are the cyclotis and that the larger species do not venture into the dense jungles.
Btw these are most likely the elephants found in north africa during the punic and later roman era. They are not taller than about 2.5m at the shoulder. Hannibal probably used these as well as the larger indian and/or african elephants as was supplied by the ptolemids. They were thought to be extinct...
Are these elephants from "Nouabale Ndoki National Park?" Or even from northern Congo? More specifically, are they "Loxodonta africana cyclotis." Please someone provide an answer soon.
Rabbitvoz I was once car-jacked by a bunch of Aardvarks. Nasty, vicious bastards they were. - the irony was they filmed it on their cell-phones and posted it on youtube. Bastard aardvarks.
Yeah Nom, gotcha' on that one. We have an alert system here that goes like this. The horses are the first alert, the dogs see the horses at alert and then they go off to investigate. It's usually when I see the full pattern emerging that I stop what I'm doing and look to see what's up. It's usually only the deer moving through the woods, but, occasionally it can be a more interesting surprise, but, they always know first.
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The horses are the first alert, the dogs see the horses at alert and then they go off to investigate. It's usually when I see the full pattern emerging that I stop what I'm doing and look to see what's up.
It's usually only the deer moving through the woods, but, occasionally it can be a more interesting surprise, but, they always know first.
ATP got nothin" on them.