‘Sabre-Toothed’ Elephant Found In Malaysia

Elephants usually have their tusks grow upwards, but a rare pygmy elephant with tusks growing downwards instead, making it look like a sabre-toothed tiger, has been found according to a wildlife official.

The unusual-looking animal was found by a team of wildlife experts at a palm oil plantation in the Malaysian state of Sabah on Borneo island on Thursday.

It is very rare,” said Sabah Wildlife Department’s assistant director Sen Nathan. “We’re not exactly sure why the tusks are like that but it could be a congenital defect or maybe because of inbreeding.

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

The wildlife department plans to send the animal to an elephant sanctuary in Sabah on Saturday until a suitable area in the wild is found where it could be released with a tracking device attached.

The tusks resemble the prehistoric sabre-tooth tiger, but of course, they are not related,” said Andrew Sebastian, co-founder of the Ecotourism and Conservation Society Malaysia.

It could make wildlife watching in Sabah more interesting.

But Sebastian warned that the rare elephant’s reversed tusks might create some problems when it comes to jostling with other elephants.