A baby elephant spotted in the wild without a trunk

A baby elephant has been spotted wandering around the plains of South Africa with a missing trunk.

Fears for the calf’s safety have grown after footage showed the baby animal walking among a herd of elephants in Kruger National Park without its critical body part.

Safari workers said they didn’t know exactly how it had lost its iconic appendage, but a predator likely ripped it off.

They said several crocodile cases grabbed baby elephants by their trunks as they sipped water from lakes.

Lions are also known to cling to the trunk when they attack large animals.

Another explanation was that it could’ve been caught in a snare.

The body part is a fusion of an elephant’s upper lip and nose. Filled with more than 100,000 muscles, this enormous appendage is both powerful and nimble.

The animals use their trunks to pick plants and fruit from trees and eat grass from the ground.

They use the trunk to suck up as much as two gallons of water at a time for either drinking or cleaning itself.

Elephants also use their trunks to defend themselves against predators. Losing it is one of the most potentially life-threatening things that can happen to the animal.

The chances of an adult elephant surviving in the wild without its trunk are  slim.

An adult needs to eat between 200-600 pounds of food a day and drink up to 50 gallons of water a day.

Without a trunk, it would be near-impossible for the animal to consume that much food or water.

The trunk is also essential for social interactions. Elephants use their trunks to hug, caress and comfort other elephants.

Without the tools to form bonds with fellow elephants, it may be ousted from its herd and vulnerable to predators.

Source: dailybbnews.com

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