By People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES)

Published: Friday, 02 December 2022 at 12:00 am


What is the scientific name of the Asian elephant?

The scientific name of the Asian elephant is Elephas maximus

Are there any subspecies?

There are three subspecies of the Asian elephant.

These subspecies designations were based primarily on body size and minor differences in coloration, plus the fact that E. m. sumatranus has relatively larger ears and an extra pair of ribs (Shoshani and Eisenberg 1982).

Where are Asian elephants found?

""
Asian elephant calf, Sir Lanka. © Sandaru Saranjaya / 500px/Getty

Distribution: (historically and current)

Distribution text is taken from the IUCN Red List, click here to read the full article.

Asian elephants formerly ranged from West Asia along the Iranian coast into the Indian subcontinent, eastwards into South-east Asia including Sumatra, Java, and Borneo, and into China at least as far as the Yangtze-Kiang. This former range covered over 9 million km².

Asian elephants are now extinct in West Asia, Java, and most of China. The western populations (Elephas maximus asurus) were probably extinct by 100 BC, and the main Chinese populations (sometimes referred to as E. m. rubridens) disappeared sometime after the 14th century BC.

Even within its surviving range in South and South-east Asia, the species has been in retreat for hundreds if not thousands of years, and generally survives only in highly fragmented populations.

Asian elephants still occur in isolated populations in 13 states, with a very approximate total range area of 486,800 km².

Asian elephants in South Asia

Bangladesh: They were once widespread, but today it is largely restricted to areas that are relatively less accessible to humans, mainly Chittagong and the Chittagong Hill Tracts in the southeast.

Bhutan: In Bhutan, all the existing elephant populations are found along the border with India. In the past, elephants made seasonal migrations from Bhutan to the grasslands of India during the wetter summer months and returning in the winter.

""
Silhouette of indian asian elephant standing in forest. © sami seraj/500px/Getty

India: Once widespread in India, the species is now restricted to four general areas: northeastern, central, northwestern, and southern India.

In northeastern India, the elephant range extends from the eastern border of Nepal in northern West Bengal to parts of the lower Brahmaputra plains and Karbi Plateau.

In central India, highly fragmented elephant populations are found in the States of Orissa, Jharkhand, and the southern part of West Bengal.

In north-western India, the species occurs in six fragmented populations at the foot of the Himalayas in Uttaranchal and Uttar Pradesh, including the Katerniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary.

In southern India, elephants occur in the hilly terrain of the Western Ghats and in parts of the Eastern Ghats.

Nepal: Elephants were once widespread in the lowland Terai, but are now restricted to a few protected areas along the border with India: Royal Chitwan National Park, Parsa Wildlife Reserve, Royal Bardia National Park, and Royal Suklaphanta Wildlife Reserve, and their environs.

Sri Lanka: Asian elephants were once found throughout Sri Lanka, but today elephants are restricted mostly to the lowlands in the dry zone. However there are small remnant populations in the wet zones in the Peak Wilderness Area and Sinharaja Area.

Asian elephants in South-east Asia

Cambodia: In Cambodia, elephants are primarily found in the mountains of the south-west and in Mondulkiri and Ratanakiri Provinces. Recent surveys in Keo Sema District (Mondulkiri Province) suggest that important numbers may remain in that area. Elsewhere, Asian elephants persist in Cambodia in only small, scattered populations.

China: Asian elephants once ranged widely over much of southern China, including the Fujiang, Guangdong, and Guangxi Provinces.

The species was extirpated in southern Fujiang and northern Guangdong during the 12th century, but evidence indicates persistence in Guangxi into the 17th century.

All that now remains of this once widespread elephant population in China is the remnant in Yunnan where the species survives in three prefectures: Xishuangbanna, Simao, and Lincang.

Lao People’s Democratic Republic: In the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, elephants remain widely but very patchily distributed in forested areas, both in the highlands and lowlands. Two important and likely viable populations are known, one in Xaignaboli Province west of the Mekong and one on the Nakai Plateau.

Sumatra: On Sumatra (in Indonesia), the elephant was once widespread, but now survives only in highly fragmented populations. In the mid-1980s, 44 discrete elephant populations were known to exist, 12 of these were in Lampung Province. However, by 2003, only three of Lampung’s 12 populations were extant.

Nevertheless, the island is thought to hold some of the most significant populations outside of India. Surveys in Lampung Province’s two national parks, Bukit Barisan Selatan and Way Kambas, produced population estimates of 498 and 180 elephants, respectively. Bukit Barisan Selatan NP is therefore a critically important area for Asian elephant conservation.

""
Asian elephant spraying water over their back, Tangkahan, Sumatra, Indonesia. © Getty

Peninsular Malaysia: Here the species is still widely distributed in the interior of the country in the following States: Pahang (which probably has the largest population), Perak, Johor, Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah, and Negeri Sembilan (where very few remain).

Borneo: On Borneo, elephants only occur in the lowlands of the northeastern part of the island in the Malaysian State of Sabah and adjacent parts of Kalimantan (Indonesia).

The origin of the elephants of Borneo remains unclear and the subject of debate. Due to the limited distribution of the island’s elephant population it is argued by some that the species was not indigenous, but descended from imported captive elephants.

However, others argues that while captive elephants have undoubtedly been brought to Borneo, genetic analyses have shown that the elephants found on Borneo are genetically distinct, with molecular divergence indicating a Pleistocene colonisation and subsequent isolation.

Myanmar: The Asian elephant has a wide, but highly fragmented, distribution in Myanmar. The five main areas of elephant abundance are: the Northern Hill Ranges, the Western Hill Ranges, Pegu Yoma (central Myanmar), Tenasserim Yoma (in the south, bordering Thailand), and Shan State or eastern Yoma.

Thailand: In Thailand, the species occurs mainly in the mountains along the border with Myanmar, with smaller fragmented populations occurring in the peninsula in the south. In the northeast areas include forest complexes and the Khao Yai National Park, and in the east Wildlife Sanctuaries and National Parks.

Viet Nam: In Viet Nam, only a small population persists now. In the northern part of the country there are no elephants left, barring occasional wanderers into Son La from Lao PDR. In the central and southern parts of the country, only very small isolated populations remain.

How many Asian elephants are there?

A recent estimate for the global population size of the Asian elephant was 41,410–52,345 animals (Sukumar 2003). The estimated population size for each country was:

  • Bangladesh: 150–250
  • Bhutan: 250–500
  • Cambodia: 250–600
  • China: 200–250
  • India: 26,390–30,770
  • Indonesia: 2,400–3,400
  • Lao PDR: 500–1,000
  • Malaysia: 2,100–3,100
  • Myanmar: 4,000–5,000
  • Nepal: 100–125
  • Sri Lanka: 2,500–4,000
  • Thailand: 2,500–3,200
  • Vietnam: 70–150

However, Blake and Hedges (2004) and Hedges (2006) argue that the oft-repeated global population ‘estimate’ of about 40,000 to 50,000 Asian elephants is no more than a crude guess, which has been accepted unchanged for a quarter of a century.

They argue that with very few exceptions all we really know about the status of Asian elephants is the location of some (probably most) populations, with in some cases a crude idea of relative abundance; and for some large parts of the species range we do not even know where the populations are, or indeed if they are still extant.

These difference of opinion are due in part to the difficulty in counting elephants in dense vegetation in difficult terrain, different survey techniques being used in different places, and a too-widely held belief that population monitoring is unimportant.

Nevertheless, whatever the error margins, it appears almost certain that over 50% of the remaining wild Asian elephants occur in India.

The overall population trend of the Asian elephant has been downwards, probably for centuries.

This remains the case in most parts of its range, but especially in most of the countries of South-east Asia. Within India, there is evidence that the large population in the Western Ghats in south of the country has been increasing in recent years due to improved conservation effectiveness.

Our (PTES) study area presently is the home range of 250 to 300 elephants.

What do Asian elephants eat?

Elephants are herbivores, which means they eat plants. They eat a wide variety of different plants and plant parts.

Their diet depends heavily on where they live, what is available, and what season it is. Some common foods include grasses, palms, legumes, flowers, fruits, roots, bamboo, and more. Some feed on farmers crops, like sugarcane.

In our study area most of the elephant herds depend on agricultural production in their influence zone.

Do Asian elephants have any predators?

Asian elephants usually do not have any predators. A calf may sometime attacked by tigers, hyaenas and wild dogs. The majority of elephant deaths occurring in India are due to human-elephant conflict and railway accidents.

How big do Asian elephants get?

The biggest Asian males reach no more than 3.5 meters, the weight of an Asian elephant is up to 3,000 – 4,000 kgs for adult females and 4,000-6,000kgs for adult males.

How long do Asian elephants live for?

The average lifespan for wild Asian Elephant is approx. 70 years. But in captivity, the lifespan can increase upto 80 years. The record living elephant ‘Dakshyayani’ died in captivity in 2019 in India at the age of 88 years.

What do Asian elephants use their trunk for?

""
Asian elephants in water, India. © Udayan Borthakur/Getty

Trunks are elephants’ noses and can detect scents up to 20km away. Elephants use their trunk to feed by grabbing and rotating trees, grasses, branches, and twigs into their mouth.

They use their trunks to suck up water that they shoot into their mouth to drink or spray their bodies to keep cool. Trunks are used in communication, such as trumpeting or touching other elephants.

How do Asian elephants sleep?

The elephant in wild observed to sleep in day time from 11am to 3pm maximum in our study areas. The captive elephants observed to sleep at night for 4 to 6 hrs approx.

How do Asian elephants communicate?

Please note external videos may contain ads: