African Forest Elephant Handbook (Paperback)
Emperor Williams
Sold by CitiRetail, Stevenage, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 29 June 2022
New - Soft cover
Condition: New
Ships from United Kingdom to U.S.A.
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by CitiRetail, Stevenage, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 29 June 2022
Condition: New
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. INTRODUCTION: Identity and DiscoveryThe African forest elephant is one of the most fascinating large animals on Earth, not only because of its size and intelligence, but because it spent a long time hidden in plain sight. For much of modern science, people spoke about "the African elephant" as if it were a single, uniform animal spread across an enormous continent. Yet deep inside the humid forests of Central and West Africa, a different elephant was living a different life-moving under a thick green ceiling, feeding on fruit and leaves, traveling along narrow forest paths, and communicating through a world where sight is limited and sound matters more than distance.Species classificationClassification is the way science organizes living things so people can discuss them with precision. It answers a basic question: when we say "forest elephant," do we mean a type of African elephant, or a separate species with its own evolutionary path?At the broadest level, elephants belong to a group of large, long-lived mammals known for social complexity, strong memory, and powerful physical adaptations. Within the elephant family, modern elephants fall into two major geographic groups: elephants of Asia and elephants of Africa. That much is familiar to many people. The story becomes more interesting within Africa itself.For many years, African elephants were typically treated as one species with two forms: a savanna form and a forest form. In that view, the differences were considered like regional variation-important, but not enough to justify separate species status. This approach was common partly because elephants are hard to study across dense forests, partly because the two forms look similar at a quick glance, and partly because the idea of "one African elephant" was convenient for textbooks and general discussion.Over time, however, multiple lines of evidence began to point in a different direction. Researchers looking closely at bodies, skulls, tusks, behavior, ecology, and later DNA began to see consistent, meaningful separation. The forest elephant was not simply a savanna elephant living among trees. It was built differently, lived differently, and-most importantly-had a distinct evolutionary history.Today, many scientific authorities recognize the African forest elephant as its own species, separate from the African savanna elephant. The forest elephant is commonly referred to as Loxodonta cyclotis, while the savanna elephant is Loxodonta africana. Even when you avoid heavy technical detail, the practical meaning is simple: forest elephants are not "just smaller African elephants." They are a distinct kind of elephant shaped by forests and by time.That distinction matters because species identity influences conservation, research priorities, and how people understand biodiversity. If forest elephants are a separate species, then their decline represents the loss of a unique evolutionary lineage. It also means that protecting them requires strategies designed around their particular habitat and social structure, not strategies borrowed from open savanna systems.Naming history and the long road to recognitionThe naming history of the African forest elephant reflects a broader pattern in nature studies: animals that live in open landscapes are often documented earlier and more thoroughly than animals that live in dense, difficult environments. Savannas are visually accessible. Forests are not. In open land, you can watch elephants from far away and follow them with relative ease. In deep rainforest, visibility can shrink to a few meters, and the animals may move silently along shaded paths. The forest itself absorbs sound and hides movement. Even the largest land mammal on the continent can remain remarkably hard to observe. This item is printed on d Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
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