|
 |
|
 |
 |
Title: |
The mammals of Rhodesia, Zambia and Malawi |
Author(s): |
Smithers, R.H.N. |
Year published: |
1966 |
Publisher: |
London, Collins |
Volume: |
- |
Pages: |
- |
 |
File: |
View PDF: 283,1 kb |
 |
Any PDF files provided by the RRC are for personal use only
and may not be reproduced. The files reflect the holdings of the RRC
library and only contain pages relevant to rhinoceros study, and may not be
complete. Users are obliged to follow all copyright restrictions.
|
|
 |
 |
|
| (9) ... 4 5 6 7 8 ...
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology - Size
White Rhino
|
Length up to 9 feet 0 inch |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology - Size
White Rhino
|
Tail 2 feet |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology - Horn
White Rhino
|
Two horns, composed of fused epi- dermal cells, arising from the skin on the snout, the front longer than the rear. The front horn averaging, in Natal, about 24 inches and more slender than in the Black Rhino, normally curved gently backwards, the upper part in the front usually slightly flatten... |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology
White Rhino
|
upper lip straight with no trace of a proboscis. |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology
Black Rhino
|
practically hairless except on the margins of the ears and on either side of the extremity of the tail. |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology
Black Rhino
|
ears funnel shaped with rounded tips. |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology
White Rhino
|
General colour grey black |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Morphology
White Rhino
|
Ears longer, tubular and more pointed than the Black Rhino and larger. |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Ecology - Food
Black Rhino
|
Almost exclusively a browser, but in some areas grazing seasonally. |
|
Location:
Subject:
Species:
|
World
Taxonomy - Taxa
African Rhino Species
|
Easily distinguished from the Black Rhinoceros in the possession of a massive hump at the junction of the neck and shoulders, the tail in this species, when on the move, looped over the back and not held erect as in the case of the Black Rhino. |
|
|
| (9) ... 4 5 6 7 8 ...
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
|