Elephants, the largest living land mammals, have evolved a specialized foot morphology to help reduce locomotor pressures while supporting their large body mass. Peak pressures that could cause tissue damage are mitigated passively by the anatomy of elephants' feet, yet this mechanism does not seem to work well for some captive animals. This study tests how foot pressures vary among African and Asian elephants from habitats where natural substrates predominate but where foot care protocols differ. Variations in pressure patterns might be related to differences in husbandry, including but not limited to trimming and the substrates that elephants typically stand and move on. Both species' samples exhibited the highest concentration of peak pr...
Foot problems are very common in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). The purpose of this stud...
Foot disease is highly prevalent in both domestic and captive mammals, presenting a significant welf...
Pathological lesions of feet occur frequently in captive elephant populations. To improve foot healt...
Elephants, the largest living land mammals, have evolved a specialized foot morphology to help reduc...
Elephants, the largest living land mammals, have evolved a specialized foot morphology to help reduc...
Plantar pressures during locomotion have causal links with foot pathologies e.g. osteoarthritis and ...
White rhinoceroses (Ceratotherium simum) are odd-toed ungulates that belong to the group Perissodact...
[Figures and Tables at the bottom of the document] The uniquely designed limbs of the African elepha...
Foot problems are a common concern in elephant husbandry. Studies on this topic with sample sizes gr...
In this study, we seek to understand how the digital cushion morphologies evident in horse and eleph...
Foot health is a common concern of captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). Besides offering adequ...
This study investigates whether foot problems in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) can be li...
For more than three decades, foot and musculoskeletal conditions have been documented among both Asi...
As a result of the lack of basic microscopic anatomy of the elephants' foot, this study deals with t...
<div><p>For more than three decades, foot and musculoskeletal conditions have been documented among ...
Foot problems are very common in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). The purpose of this stud...
Foot disease is highly prevalent in both domestic and captive mammals, presenting a significant welf...
Pathological lesions of feet occur frequently in captive elephant populations. To improve foot healt...
Elephants, the largest living land mammals, have evolved a specialized foot morphology to help reduc...
Elephants, the largest living land mammals, have evolved a specialized foot morphology to help reduc...
Plantar pressures during locomotion have causal links with foot pathologies e.g. osteoarthritis and ...
White rhinoceroses (Ceratotherium simum) are odd-toed ungulates that belong to the group Perissodact...
[Figures and Tables at the bottom of the document] The uniquely designed limbs of the African elepha...
Foot problems are a common concern in elephant husbandry. Studies on this topic with sample sizes gr...
In this study, we seek to understand how the digital cushion morphologies evident in horse and eleph...
Foot health is a common concern of captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). Besides offering adequ...
This study investigates whether foot problems in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) can be li...
For more than three decades, foot and musculoskeletal conditions have been documented among both Asi...
As a result of the lack of basic microscopic anatomy of the elephants' foot, this study deals with t...
<div><p>For more than three decades, foot and musculoskeletal conditions have been documented among ...
Foot problems are very common in captive Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). The purpose of this stud...
Foot disease is highly prevalent in both domestic and captive mammals, presenting a significant welf...
Pathological lesions of feet occur frequently in captive elephant populations. To improve foot healt...