Bіzаггe eпсoᴜпteг: Malaysian Elephant Named ‘Sabre-tooth’ Discovered with Tusks fасіпɡ the wгoпɡ Direction

A rare dwarf elephant whose tusks evolve downwards instead of upwards to look like a saber-toothed tiger has been found in Malaysia.

A group of wildlife experts found this elephant on a palm oil plantation in the Malaysian state of Sabah on Borneo’s island on Thursday.

 

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“It’s scarce,” Sabah Wildlife Department’s assistant director Sen Nathan said on Friday.

“We’re not sure exactly why the tusk is, but it could be a congenital disability or possibly from inbreeding.”

 

 

Nathan said a similar elephant was recorded on camera a few years ago and in 2015 in Sabah.

The wildlife ministry plans to send the animal to an elephant sanctuary in Sabahon on Saturday until a suitable area in the wild can be released with a tracking device.

 

 

“The tusks resemble prehistoric saber-tooth tigers, but of course, they are not related,” said Andrew Sebastian, co-founder of the Malaysian Ecotourism Association.

“It could make wildlife viewing in Sabah more interesting.”

But Sebastian warns that reversed rare elephant tusks could cause problems jostling with other elephants.

 

 

A study done a decade ago found that there were about 2,000 elephants in Sabah. Wildlife officials say a new study will be underway soon.

Nathan said the biggest threat to elephants in Sabah is not poaching but habitat loss due to human modernization and population growth.