Why can mice kill elephants?

There is no scientific research to prove that rats can kill elephants. The so-called mouse getting into the elephant's nose and killing the elephant is just a game setting in the Colosseum, and there is no scientific basis.

It is rumored that elephants are afraid of mice, but it is also true. John, a researcher at the Royal Veterinary College in London, believes that elephants are afraid of fast-moving small animals around them. "I remember when I was in Thailand, dogs barked and ran around the elephant, and the elephant would panic and run to the nearby jungle."

In 2006, Bailey Circus also conducted an experiment. They put the mouse in their hands and put it in front of the elephant. The elephant saw the mouse clearly, but he was not afraid. Facts have proved that elephants are not afraid of mice, but of things that flash by quickly, strange scenes and strange sounds.

Elephants are good at receiving sounds with their feet;

Elephants are good at receiving sound in another unusual way-their feet. They will step on the ground with their feet and make a low rumble, which can travel for several kilometers and can be heard by another elephant with his feet.

This is because elephants have extremely sensitive nerve endings on their feet, which can receive these "underground" information. Having this ability to capture "underground" information can protect elephants from threats such as storms and poachers.