Indian Rhinoceros Credit
The Indian rhinoceros (also known as the Indian Rhinoceros and the Asian one-horned rhinoceros)
is a small species of rhinoceros native to parts of India and Nepal.
The Indian rhinoceros gets it's common name from the fact that it only
has one horn rather than two. Historically, the Indian rhinoceros had a
vast range across northern India but today that range has been
drastically reduced due to excessive hunting. The Indian rhinoceros is
now confined to the tall grasslands and forests that surround the Himalayas Mountain range.
The Indian rhinoceros is one of the smaller rhinoceros species, thought to be most closely related to the Javan rhinoceros.
The Indian rhinoceros has one horn which it uses for defence,
intimidation, digging up roots and breaking branches during feeding. The
horn of the Indian rhinoceros is made from a substance called keratin
and is therefore very strong. The horn of the Indian rhinoceros is used in ancient medicine and many Indian rhinos have been illegally poached for them.
The Indian rhinoceros is a herbivorous animal meaning
that it sustains itself on a purely plant based diet. Indian rhinos
browse the densely vegetated sub-tropical forest for leaves, flowers,
buds, fruits, berries and roots which they dig up from the ground using
their horns. Due to it's large size, the Indian rhino's only real
predator in the wild are large wild cats such as tigers that will
prey on the Indian rhino calves and weak individuals. Humans are the
biggest threat to the Indian rhinoceros as they have been hunted to the
brink of extinction for their horns.
The Indian rhinoceros is solitary animal and
only comes together with other Indian rhinos to mate. The female Indian
rhinoceros gives birth to a single calf after a gestation period that
is over a year long. The Indian rhinoceros calf remains with it's mother
until it is at least 2 years old and big enough to become independent.
Today, the Indian rhinoceros is an endangered animal and has been
pushed into only a small fraction of it's historical territory by human
hunters and deforestation. There are thought to be around 3,000 Indian
rhinoceros individuals left in the wild, two thirds of which are
believed to be in the Assam region of India. Source
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