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Plural of rhinoceros
Plural of rhinoceros















Most are solitary inhabitants of open grassland, scrub forest, or marsh, but the Sumatran rhino lives in deep forest.

#PLURAL OF RHINOCEROS SKIN#

All have thick, virtually hairless skin that, in the three Asian species, forms platelike folds at the shoulders and thighs. One of the largest of all land animals (the white rhinoceros is second only to the elephant), the rhinoceros is particularly distinguished by one or two horns growths of keratin, a fibrous hair protein on its upper snout. Any of five extant African and Asian species (family Rhinocerotidae) of three-toed horned ungulates. rhino, any of several species of large land mammal characterized by tough body plates and a horned snout (native to India and Africa)ģ. Captive-breeding programs offer the only hope for maintaining some species until adequate protection can be provided in the wild.Ģ. Despite protective laws, poaching continues, spurred by a large Oriental market for rhinoceros horn (valued as an aphrodisiac) and blood. All but the black rhinoceros are listed as endangered in the Red Data Book, a compilation published by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Despite their bulk, rhinoceroses are remarkably agile the black rhino may attain a speed of about 45 kilometres (30 miles) per hour, even in thick brush and can wheel rapidly after missing a charge. The African black rhino is normally ill-tempered and unpredictable and may charge any unfamiliar sound or smell.

plural of rhinoceros

Most prefer to avoid man, but males, particularly bad-tempered during the breeding season and females with calves may charge with little provocation. African black rhino (Diceros bicornis) Rhinoceroses have poor eyesight but acute senses of hearing and smell. In solitary species the home territory is crisscrossed with well-worn trails and often marked at the borders with urine and piles of dung. Interactions between individuals usually are avoided, but the square-lipped rhino lives in groups of up to 10 animals.

plural of rhinoceros

Most rhinoceroses are solitary inhabitants of open grassland, savanna, scrub forest or marsh, but the Sumatran rhino is now found only in deep forest. The feet of the modern species have three short toes, tipped with broad, blunt nails. They are nearly or completely hairless, except for the tail tip and ear fringes, but some fossil species were covered with dense fur. All rhinos are gray or brown in colour, including the white or square-lipped (Ceratotherium simum), which tends to be paler than the others. Rhinoceroses are noted for their thick skin, which forms platelike folds, especially at the shoulders and thighs. Adults of larger species weigh three to five tons. Modern rhinoceroses are large animals, ranging from 2.5 metres (8 feet) long and 1.5 m high at the shoulder, in the Sumatran rhinoceros (Didermocerus or Dicerorhinus, sumatrensis), to about 4.3 m long and 2 m high in the great Indian rhinoceros (R. Modern rhinoceroses are characterized by the possession of one (in the two species of the genus Rhinoceros) or two (in the other three genera) horns on the upper surface of the snout, composed not of true horn but of keratin, a fibrous protein found in hair. The term rhinoceros is sometimes also applied to other, extinct members of the family Rhinocerotidae, a diverse group that includes several dozen fossil genera in addition to the recent ones.

plural of rhinoceros

plural Rhinoceroses, Rhinoceros or Rhinoceri, any of five species of ponderous, hoofed mammals, family Rhinocerotidae (order Perissodactyla), found in eastern and southern Africa and in tropical Asia.















Plural of rhinoceros