African Savanna Elephant
Loxodonta africana
Also known as African Bush Elephant
The largest living land animal and a powerful ecosystem engineer. Through feeding, movement and water use, savanna elephants are linked to seed dispersal, open habitat and water access that many other species depend on.
How this species supports living systems
Functions → Services → RecipientsRead each line left to right: the african savanna elephant performs an ecological function, which supports an ecosystem service, which benefits a recipient. These functions, services and recipients are shared nodes — other species connect to the same ones, forming the first layer of the knowledge graph.
Identity
The African savanna elephant is a separate species from the smaller African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis), and is the largest land animal alive today.
Conservation
Assessed as Endangered for the savanna elephant specifically — it has been evaluated separately from the forest elephant since 2021. Combined estimates should be read carefully, as the two species are counted together in many surveys.
Distribution
Savanna elephants once roamed most of sub-Saharan Africa. Today their range is broken into fragments, with much of the population inside protected areas.
Biology
- Lives in matriarchal family herds led by an older female
- Moves long distances between seasonal feeding and water
- Strong long-term memory of routes and resources
- Digs for water in dry riverbeds, opening access for others
Elephants live in tight female-led families and reproduce slowly, which makes lost individuals hard to replace. Their daily activity reshapes the landscape around them.
Ecological Intelligence
Ecosystem engineer = a species that physically reshapes its habitat in ways many others depend on. By toppling trees, dispersing seeds and digging for water, elephants are linked to keeping savannas open and diverse.
Threats & Solutions
Threat → Category → DriverIllegal killing for ivory has driven major declines across much of the range.
Demand for ivory sustains the trafficking that fuels poaching.
Farmland and infrastructure break up the large ranges elephants need.
Crop-raiding near settlements leads to retaliatory killing of elephants.
Fences, roads and farmland increasingly cut the seasonal routes elephants depend on.
More severe droughts are associated with food and water shortages, especially for calves.
Patrols and laws that stop illegal killing.
Enforcement against ivory poaching directly protects existing populations.
Local communities benefiting from and helping protect nearby wildlife.
When communities benefit from living elephants, both conflict and poaching tend to fall.
Connected strips of habitat that let animals move safely between areas.
Reconnecting ranges restores the movement elephants need across seasons.
Planning land use so wildlife keeps the space and routes it needs.
Planning land use keeps room for elephants alongside people and farms.
Actively running parks and reserves so they work.
Well-run parks hold most of the remaining population.
Helping farmers protect livestock so wildlife isn't killed in return.
Deterrents and compensation reduce retaliatory killing near farmland.
Safeguarding the water sources wildlife depends on in dry seasons.
Safeguarding dry-season water helps elephants through drought.
Importance Assessment
How much this species shapes its ecosystem.
How close the species is to disappearing.
Its significance to people and cultures.
How widely known the species is.
How much reliable data exists.
How relevant it is to 4PLANET missions.
Connections
First layer of the knowledge graphSources
Source keys reference the bodies this profile draws on. Full citations will connect to a dedicated source database in a later version. No citations are fabricated.