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Schouteden, H., 1911. Le rhinoceros blanc. Revue Zoologique Africaine 1: 118-124, pl. 6, fig. 1

  details
 
Location: Africa - Eastern Africa - Uganda
Subject: Distribution - Records
Species: White Rhino


Original text on this topic:
In 1900 the first skull with exactly known origin was reported in Europe (from where it went to USA) by Major Gibbons: that skull belonged to an animal killed in the neighbourhood of Lado.
In 1902, captain Hawker brought to England a horn of a white rhinoceros which he had received from Belgian officers in Lado, after which Sclater (1903) reported that `the Belgians do not distinguish the common Rhinoceros bicornis and seem to believe that all the rhinos belong to a single species.'
In 1903, Scherren noticed that the species was common in the northern parts of Congo (obviously meaning the country of Lado) and adjacent parts of Sudan, and that several english sportsmen had horns from this region.
In 1908, Major Powell Cotton, gave to the British Museum the skull of a white rhinoceros which he killed in Lado. Basing himself on this skull, the curator in London, Mr. Lydekker established a special subspecies with the name cottoni.
Since that time, several sportsmen have brought back to Europe specimens of Rhinoceros simus Cottoni, mainly from Lado, where the animal is still quite abundant. Unfortunately, the frequent hunts - or to speak with Berger, the game massacres (wildsclachtereien) - in this region have already taken many specimens and it may not take long before this northern race will be as rare as the typical white rhino in South Africa.

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