Classroom lesson · Wildlife · 🇨🇮 Ivory Coast

African Forest Elephant

A smaller, tusked elephant of the rainforest

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The African forest elephant is a separate species from the larger African savannah elephant most people picture. It is smaller, has straighter, downward-pointing tusks, and is built for pushing through thick rainforest instead of roaming open grassland. Côte d'Ivoire's national symbol is the elephant, and the country's football team is even called 'The Elephants'.

Tell me more

Forest elephants are smaller than their savannah cousins – they stand about 2.4 metres tall at the shoulder rather than 3.3 metres. Their smaller, more rounded ears and downward-pointing tusks help them move through dense forest without getting tangled. They are masters at finding paths through vegetation that seems impenetrable.

Like all elephants, forest elephants are highly intelligent and live in family groups led by older females called matriarchs. The matriarch remembers where water and food can be found in different seasons, and her knowledge is essential for the whole family's survival. Young elephants learn from watching and following older relatives.

Forest elephants are sometimes called the 'architects of the rainforest'. When they walk, they clear paths that smaller animals use. When they eat, they knock down old trees that allow sunlight to reach the forest floor. Their dung contains seeds that grow into new plants. Without elephants, the forest would look and work very differently.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might scientists only recently realise that forest and savannah elephants are different species?
  2. 02The matriarch leads the family because of her memory and experience. Why is experience valuable even for animals?
  3. 03Côte d'Ivoire chose the elephant as its national symbol. Why do you think a country might choose a wild animal to represent it?
Try this

Classroom activity

Make a Venn diagram comparing African forest elephants and African savannah elephants. Research their different sizes, ear shapes, tusk directions, and habitats. Then in the overlapping middle section, list everything they have in common.