News

This is conservation. For the critically endangered black rhinoceros, being lifted by its feet is sometimes the only ticket to survival. What seems absurd at first glance is, in fact, the safest ...
The female calf is the second successful Indian rhino birth at the Park in its 52-year history - the first was the calf's half-brother in 2020. The safari park said both mum and b ...
The male southern white rhino was the newest member of a protected species, with about 20,400 left worldwide, according to The Wilds. With oversized, "mushroom-like" feet, the calf has been ...
The Javan rhino (Rhinoceros sondaicus) is a critically endangered species that grows to about 10 feet (3 meters) long and at maturity stands over 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall. There are fewer than 100 ...
As one of the Ice Age megafauna, the woolly rhinoceros was more than 6 feet tall and 16 feet long, sporting two big keratin horns on the front of its head. Since some of the specimens scientists have ...
Hope for the species Sumatran rhinos are the world’s smallest rhinos, standing at roughly 4 to 5 feet tall (about 1.5 meters), with an average body length of around 8.2 feet (2.5 meters). They ...
Miners accidentally uncovered a mummified wooly rhinoceros and a preserved horn at a dig site in Russia. Under special conditions, permafrost mummifies plant and animal remains through a process ...
"The great thing about lifting the rhinos upside down by their feet is that they're aerodynamic themselves," says Radcliffe. While the image of an upside-down rhino may initially seem "cruel", the ...