Animal Bytes
 
Black Rhinoceros
 
Common Name: black rhinoceros
   
Class: Mammalia
   
Order: Perissodactyla
   
Family: Rhinocerotidae
   
Genus species: Diceros (two horns) bicornis (two horn)

 

FAST FACTS
FUN FACTS
ECOLOGY & CONSERVATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
  baby rhino
 
Fast Facts
Description:

large stocky animal, naturally gray in color but will often take on the color of the local soil; two facial horns and a prehensile lip

   
Size: 1.5 to 1.9 m (5-6 ft.) tall at shoulder; 3.1 to 3.7 m long (10-12 ft.)
   
Weight: 454 to 1362 kg (1,000-3,000 lb.), females are smaller
   
Diet: herbivore that browses on bushes, leaves, and seedlings
   
Gestation: 15 months
   
Sexual maturity: males 7 to 9 years, females 4 to 6 years
   
Life span: 25 to 40 years
   
Range: isolated areas of central and southern Africa
   
Habitat: bushy plains, rugged hills, and scrub lands
   
Population:  
   
Status: listed by USFWS as endangered and protected by CITES
   
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Fun Facts
1.

A rhino's horn is not a true horn that is attached to the skull. It grows from the skin and is made up of keratin fibers, the same material found in hair and nails.

   
2. Black rhinos have a prehensile lip that is used much like a finger to select and pick the leaves and twigs they prefer.
   
3. Black rhinos travel alone except while breeding or raising offspring. Juveniles remain with the mother until they are completely weaned just before a new baby is born.
   
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Ecology and Conservation
 

Rhinos are heavy browsers that hinder woody plants from dominating their habitat. This is important because it allows grasses to grow which provide food for many other animals on the grassy plains. Young rhinos are occasionally prey items for large carnivores such as lions and hyenas. People of some cultures believe that rhino horn contains medicinal properties. This is most likely not true but is one of the primary reasons rhinos are poached. There are fewer than 2,550 black rhinos alive today.

   
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Bibliography
 

Estes, Richard D. The Safari Companion. Post Mills, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing Co., 1993.

   
  Martin, Esmond and Chryssee Bradley. Run Rhino Run. London: Chatto and Windus, 1982.
   
  Schenkel R. and L. Schenkel-Halliger. Mammalia depicta: Ecology and Behavior of the Black Rhinoceros. Berlin: Verlag, Paul, and Parey, 1969.
   
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