Remember seeing an elephant with tusks so long they kissed the ground?
Probably not. These majestic specimens and their precious genes are
rapidly fading from the species – and perhaps even human memory
The Last Great Tuskers
FADING GIANTS
Text and Photos George Dian Balan
WILDLIFE
right The youngest
great tusker in Asia is
just 23, but his tusks
are already two metres
long, a length typical of
40-year-old specimens
Asian Elephant
(Elephas maximus)
Size: Up to 3.4m tall (males) or 2.9m tall (females)
Life Span: Up to 70 years
Location: India and 12 countries in Southeast Asia
Notable Trait: Males typically grow tusks, while cows
have small incisor teeth called tushes
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TUSKER TIMELINE
ȑAsian elephants diverge
from woolly mammoths
ȑBig tuskers are still
common across South Asia
ȑBig tuskers are hunted
in India and Myanmar
ȑThe last big tuskers are
sent to Western zoos
ȑMost big tuskers belong
to tourist sites
31st century Bce 1800s 1900s 1970s 2010s