Mr. Richard Reynolds, Since you are the answer man on animals and to me this rhino sure has a very wide in diameter horn and also very large. I thought rhino horns were smaller in diameter and longer and pointed. If you see this please enlighten us folks that are not learned on the sudject. Thanks Harry in Texas
Tsavo is a male white rhino. “White” does not refer to color but rather is thought to have come from an Afrikaans word meaning “wide.”
The Dutch Afrikaanas were the first western settlers of South Africa where these rhinos live. When the British later arrived they mistranslated the word to mean white. “Wide” describes the broad or wide lips of this species. The Germans call it the broad-lipped rhino (“Breitmaulnashorn”) and the smaller back rhino, the hooked-lipped (“Spitzmaulnashorn”), which accurately describe the respective animals. The words white and black are now used regularly.
The white rhino uses its broad lips for grazing while the black uses its hooked lip for plucking browse. These differences are readily apparent when looking at them.
White rhinos are huge animals, the males regularly can go up to three tons and the largest ever recorded weighed over 9,000 pounds (that’s elephant size!), making the whites by far the largest of the five species of rhino. They have heavy thick horns like we see in Tsavo.
Whites also have a noticeable hump on the shoulder. In this photo of Tsavo we see it next to the trainer‘s hand. It is more pronounced when the animal lifts its head.
Thank you Mr. Reynolds as you always have all the correct answers. You have all the details so us folks now know thanks to you. It is greatly appreciated. Harry in Texas
Thank you Mr. Reynolds as you always have all the correct answers. You have all the details so us folks now know thanks to you. It is greatly appreciated. Harry in Texas
I had 16 adults and two babies born and bred at Great Adventure in NJ. I know that the white rhinos can be worked and they respond to hand rubbing . They do not see well and when they get used to you rubbing and touching them they are easy to handle. For the most part not all...:)
5 comments:
Mr. Richard Reynolds,
Since you are the answer man on animals and to me this rhino sure has a very wide in diameter horn and also very large.
I thought rhino horns were smaller in diameter and longer and pointed.
If you see this please enlighten us folks that are not learned on the sudject.
Thanks
Harry in Texas
Tsavo is a male white rhino. “White” does not refer to color but rather is thought to have come from an Afrikaans word meaning “wide.”
The Dutch Afrikaanas were the first western settlers of South Africa where these rhinos live. When the British later arrived they mistranslated the word to mean white. “Wide” describes the broad or wide lips of this species. The Germans call it the broad-lipped rhino (“Breitmaulnashorn”) and the smaller back rhino, the hooked-lipped (“Spitzmaulnashorn”), which accurately describe the respective animals. The words white and black are now used regularly.
The white rhino uses its broad lips for grazing while the black uses its hooked lip for plucking browse. These differences are readily apparent when looking at them.
White rhinos are huge animals, the males regularly can go up to three tons and the largest ever recorded weighed over 9,000 pounds (that’s elephant size!), making the whites by far the largest of the five species of rhino. They have heavy thick horns like we see in Tsavo.
Whites also have a noticeable hump on the shoulder. In this photo of Tsavo we see it next to the trainer‘s hand. It is more pronounced when the animal lifts its head.
Thank you Mr. Reynolds as you always have all the correct answers.
You have all the details so us folks now know thanks to you.
It is greatly appreciated.
Harry in Texas
Thank you Mr. Reynolds as you always have all the correct answers.
You have all the details so us folks now know thanks to you.
It is greatly appreciated.
Harry in Texas
I had 16 adults and two babies born and bred at Great Adventure in NJ. I know that the white rhinos can be worked and they respond to hand rubbing . They do not see well and when they get used to you rubbing and touching them they are easy to handle. For the most part not all...:)
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