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Eastern black rhinoceros - Simple English Wikipedia, the free . . . The Eastern black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis michaeli) is also known as the East African black rhinoceros It is a critically endangered subspecies of black rhino that lives in woodland and scrubland biome It lives in countries like Ethiopia, Sudan, Somalia, Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda Black rhinos typically weigh up to 2,090 to 2,870 lbs
Historic Sampling of a Vanishing Beast: Population Structure . . . Abstract The black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis L ) is a critically endangered species historically distributed across sub-Saharan Africa Hunting and habitat disturbance have diminished both its numbers and distribution since the 19th century, but a poaching crisis in the late 20th century drove them to the brink of extinction
Priority endangered species - | WWF Rhinos African rhinos (white and black) Asian rhinos (greater one-horned, Javan, Sumatran) Great apes African great apes (chimpanzee, gorilla (Eastern Western), bonobo) Orang-utans (Bornean and Sumatran) Cetaceans 20 marine and 6 freshwater species are listed See here for a full list of current Cetaceans priority species
Black rhino project translocates 200th rhino | WWF South Africa More on the Black Rhino Range Expansion Project WWF’s Black Rhino Range Expansion Project aims to increase growth rate and numbers of the critically endangered black rhino Since 2003 the project has successfully created 12 new black rhino populations in South Africa 201 black rhino have been moved to these project sites
Vaquita | Species | WWF - World Wildlife Fund Nearly one out of every five vaquita get entangled and drown in gillnets intended for other marine species like the totoaba, a critically endangered fish also found in the upper Gulf of California Entanglement in gillnets set for totoaba was the primary cause that brought the vaquita to low levels by the mid-1970s