user: pass:
File AvailableWolf, S. 1960 Afrikanische Elfenbeinloffel des 16. Jahrhunderts im Museum fur Volkerkunde Dresden. Ethnologica NF 2: 408-432
Location:
Subject:
Species:
Africa
Trade
African Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableGee, E.P. 1959 Report on a survey of the rhinoceros areas of Nepal, March and April 1959. Oryx 5 (2): 53-85, pls. 1-13, maps 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableGee, E.P. 1959 The Great Indian rhinoceros (R. unicornis) in Nepal: Report of a fact-finding survey, April-May 1959. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 56 (3): 484-510, pls. 1-3, maps 1-3
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
Most of the rhino poachers in Nepal take refuge first in the hills and then make their way to India, where the horns probably pass through the port of Calcutta to the Far East. The possession and sale of rhino produce is illegal in India, if the place of origin is Assam or Bengal. But if the or...
  details

File AvailableForan, W.R. 1958 Edwardian ivory poachers over the Nile. African Affairs 57 (227), 125-134
Location:
Subject:
Species:
Africa - Eastern Africa
Trade
African Rhino Species
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableWhitehead, G.O. 1953 Suppressed classes among the Bari and Bari-speaking tribes. Sudan Notes and Records 34 (2): 265-280
Location:
Subject:
Species:
Africa - Eastern Africa - Sudan
Trade
African Rhino Species
The professional hunters trade with the freemen for dura and money, using for this purpose meat, honey, elephant tusks, rhinoceros horns, and giraffe tails. Their occupation requires a more or less nomadic life, at least during the dry months of the year, and their huts and granaries are smaller ...
  details

File AvailableBabault, G. 1949 Notes ethologiques sur quelques mammiferes africains. Mammalia 13: 1-16
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
On the way to Khartoum, Colonel Barker, Game Warden of Sudan, showed us three bags of horns of white rhinos coming from our neighboring colony. They contained horns of all sizes, some of which came from young animals. He asked us to help him stop the massacre of this interesting animal, which i...
  details

File AvailableAnsell, W.F.H. 1947 A note on the position of rhinoceros in Burma. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 47 (2): 249-276, pl. 1, map 1
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
It is said that in the old days caravans used to come from China, right across Tibet to India in search of the horn.
  details

File AvailableChevasnerie, A. de la 1942 De L'Influence du sport sur une chasse aux Rhinoceros. Sports Jeunesse D'Indochine 1 (51) Dec 19: 2
Location:
Subject:
Species:
Africa - Western Africa - Cameroon
Trade
Black Rhino
No details available yet
  details

File AvailableCaldwell, K. 1938 Game wardens of Kenya. Journal of the Society for the Preservation of the Fauna of the Empire 35: 22-25
Location:
Subject:
Species:
World
Trade
All Rhino Species
The horn is exported to China for medicine by Arab, Indian and Somali middlemen who buy cheaply from the native poachers. I am glad to say that nowadays the Italian Somaliland authorities will not accept ivory or rhino horn unless it is accompanied by documents that show it was legally obtained ...
  details

File AvailableHaywood, A.H. 1937 Game animals of West Africa. Journal of the Royal African Society 36 (145): 421-432
Location:
Subject:
Species:
Africa - Western Africa - Nigeria
Trade
Black Rhino
There is no doubt that rhino in Northern Nigeria have decreased very considerably during the past 25 years owing to their excessive destruction by the natives. This species is in List 'B' = animals partially protected
  details


[ Home ][ Literature ][ Rhino Images ][ Rhino Forums ][ Rhino Species ][ Links ][ About V2.0]