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The elephant has 5 toes on each foot, and the toenails are thick and thick to protect its feet from injury.
So each elephant has a total of 20 toenails, and they don't have hooves, so we don't call them ungulates.
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All hoofed animals walk on their toes, not just elephants.
In addition, most mammals with long grasps, such as cats and dogs, walk with the tip of the grasp (i.e., the toes).
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Never heard of elephants walking on their fingers.
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When an elephant needs to control its speed or perform fine movements, walking backwards allows for better balance and control of the body. Additionally, walking upside down can also help elephants walk on different types of ground, such as sandy or muddy ground, as these can trap their feet in it.
Hello, dear, I'm glad to answer for you. Elephants walk upside down because their front legs are longer and stronger than their hind legs. When the elephant needs to control its speed or perform fine movements, it is necessary to walk upside down to better balance the body and control the direction.
In addition, walking upside down can also help the elephant to walk on different types of ground, such as sandy or muddy ground, as these can trap their feet in it.
You've done a great job! Can you elaborate on that?
Ok no problem. Elephants are the largest land animals in the world, and their body weight can reach several tons. To support such a large body, elephants have very strong limbs and their front legs are longer than their hind legs.
This body structure makes the elephant's hands more suitable for using the front legs to support the body, while the hind legs are used to propel the body. When elephants need to change their speed or perform fine movements, they walk backwards. This style of walking can help them better balance their bodies and control their direction.
Since elephants have longer front legs than hind legs, they can more easily control the movement of their front legs when walking backwards. This allows the elephant to move its body more accurately and thus avoid hitting obstacles or other animals. In addition, walking backwards can also help elephants walk on different types of ground.
For example, when elephants walk on sand or muddy ground, these surfaces can trap their feet in them, making it more difficult to walk the potato tribes. In this case, walking backwards can help the elephant to have better control of the body and thus walk more easily. In conclusion, elephants walk upside down because their body structure and walking style make this behavior more natural and effective.
This behavior not only helps elephants have better control over their bodies and orientation, but it also helps them walk on different types of ground.
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Strangely, elephants walk on tiptoe with their heels off the ground, and their outstretched foot bones are supported by elastic fiber pads, which make the elephant's feet wide and round, which can support the elephant's weight, allowing it to walk quietly.
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The trunk of an elephant is long, thick, stretchable and flexible, not only for breathing and smelling, but also for absorbing water, and it can pull up grass from the ground like a hand, and then roll it up and put it into its mouth. It will use its nose to suck in water and fine sand to spray and bathe its body, and it can also replace its short tail to repel mosquitoes and flies, pick leaves and fruits, help its owner pull wood and carry bulky things, and use its nose as a self-defense when in danger, roll up the enemy and throw it out fiercely. Trained elephants can also use their noses to play harmonica, play drums, pick up fallen needles, and even work as nannies to babysit their children.
The elephant keeps swinging its nose when it walks, which is using its nose as a crutch to find its way.
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When a person walks, the center of gravity of the body will constantly change with the change of pace (the change of the left and right feet), and the brain will send instructions to make the arm "involuntarily" continue to swing to achieve the balance of the body.
The swing of the nose when the elephant walks is actually the same as the swing of the arm when the human walks, that is, the balance of the body is achieved by involuntarily swinging the nose.
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Similar to a person's left and right hands, they involuntarily swing when walking, so let's maintain balance and comfort. Of course, almost all mammals twist their bodies while walking, for the same reason.
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However, the African elephant, an animal with a foot circumference (m) of the paw, walks on tiptoe, like stepping on a high heel.
Olgapanagiotopoulou, a morphologist at the University of Queensland in Australia, wanted to be a ** after all. Many elephants in captivity suffer from foot problems and even have to change their gait to walk awkwardly, but this can gradually evolve into a disease. As a result of the lack of ** measures, many elephants are euthanized every year in zoos and sanctuaries.
There are two main theories about the cause of this phenomenon: first, the fact that the elephants are kept in captivity itself forces the elephants to change their gait, which eventually leads to foot diseases; Second, environmental factors have caused this problem. Both causes influence each other, but it is difficult to distinguish which is the main one.
Measuring an elephant's pace is difficult, but Panagiotopoulou and her colleagues have found a way. They had five elephants from a park in South Africa walk on a platform equipped with pressure detectors to measure the load distribution of their feet.
They compared the measurements with those of Asian elephants at a zoo in the United Kingdom and found that when elephants walked in a wild or semi-wild environment, they focused mainly on their foretoes and put minimal pressure on their heels. The toes are the most common areas of disease.
Due to the hard ground in zoos and some sanctuaries, some are paved with asphalt, which is more likely to cause elephant foot pain. "We know that elephants in captivity may have diseases that wild elephants don't have, but reserves should think about how to protect them." ”
We certainly can't put these elephants in the wild. In Africa, where poachers are rampant, captivity is very necessary. Since 2007, the number of elephants in Africa's savannahs has declined by 30 per cent due to poaching.
In addition, Panagiotopoulou promotes pressure plates to measure elephants' stride in zoos. If there is a problem with the elephant's foot, it can be trimmed to prevent the injury from progressing further into disease.
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The elephant's heel is boneless, and it walks on its toes.
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You're asking elephants how to walk? Animals with all four feet on the ground should walk the same way, and if you observe how the dog walks, the elephant probably walks. If you still don't understand, try to put your hands on the ground and see how you walk, and you'll probably understand.
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I think it should be the front right leg and the back left leg up together, falling, and then the front left leg and the back right leg.
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Raise your legs and lower your ......(It can't jump).
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