- Rhino numbers recover, but new threats emerge | Dialogue Earth
Nature Rhino numbers recover, but new threats emerge Rhino numbers have slowly recovered after stringent steps against hunting and poaching, but climate change and invasive species offer new threats Once down to 200, there are now 3,500 rhinoceros in the world [image courtesy WWF Nepal]
- Will The Rhino Population Growth Increase Tourist’s Numbers . . .
The eastern black rhino, one of the sub-species of the rhinoceros, is in critical danger of extinction, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)
- Number of rhinos slightly up globally but poaching increases . . .
The number of white rhinos increased from 15,942 in 2022 to 17,464 in 2023, but the black and greater one-horned rhino stayed the same, according to the report published by the International Rhino Foundation ahead of Sunday's World Rhino Day
- Good news: black rhino population increases! - Save The Rhino
Thanks to dedicated conservation efforts, the black rhino population has increased and subspecies has now been reclassified to a lower category of threat
- African black rhino populations are on the rise due to . . .
The remarkable increase in African black rhino populations, growing by several hundred in the past five years, is a testament to the work of concerted conservation efforts
- Catastrophic 73% decline in the average size of wildlife . . .
The percentage change in the index reflects the average proportional change in monitored animal population sizes at sites around the world, not the number of individual animals lost, nor the number of populations lost The LPR 2024 is the 15th edition of WWF's biennial flagship publication
- Latest News Archivi - Rhinos of the World
As usual we’ll list the news published in the latest weeks RHINO BIRTHS Two facilities announced two different births with nearly two months of delay Sometimes the announcement is postponed bec
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