Primelephas (SciiFii)

The common four-tusked elephant (Primelephas vulgaris) is a species of elephant that originally lived in Miocene and Pliocene Asia as an extinct species of Primelephas and was once extinct, but has since been brought back from extinction by SciiFii and introduced throughout the modern rainforests, swamps, forests, open woodlands, grasslands, shrublands, and scrublands across Eurasia and Africa to help boost biodiversity. The common four-tusked elephants are most closely related to mammoths, straight-tusked elephants, African elephants, and Asian elephants. The common four-tusked elephants are smaller than African elephants, having a shoulder height that is between 2 and 3.2 meters (6.6 and 10.5 feet) and having a body weight between 2,000 and 4,000 kilograms (4,400 and 8,800 lb). The common four-tusked elephants are named for having four tusks, which is unusual for a "true" elephant. Like all elephants, the common four-tusked elephant is a herbivore that mainly feeds on grasses, leaves, bark, shrubs, fruits, and many other types of vegetation, and both females (young and old) and male calves are social herd-dwelling animals in which herds are led by the matriarchs (elderly females), while adult males live in solitary lives unless during mating seasons, when males are ready to mate with the females. The conservation status of the common four-tusked elephant is Vulnerable due to habitat loss and some poaching, but the conservationists are working their best in protecting the natural habitat of Asian straight-tusked elephants and end poaching, so far, these actions are working and the population trend of common four-tusked elephants are increasing.