The post Fun Facts About Rhinos You Probably Didn’t Know appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>The Rhino family has five different species: white, black, Indian, Javan, and Sumatran. Javan rhino is the most endangered of them all, with estimates that only 60 specimens exist in the whole world. Sumatran is the smallest, standing at 4 ft 3 in compared to 6.6 ft that white rhino can reach.
Rhino horns are made out of keratin, the same protein that forms human hair and fingernails. The horn constantly grows over the course of the rhino’s life at a pace of 2.5 inches per year.
White rhino and black rhino are two different species, but the difference is not in their color, as they are both grey. White rhino got its name after the African word “wyd,” used to describe the rhino’s characteristic wide upper lip, which was mistakenly understood as “white” by foreigners. To avoid confusion, they named a similar rhino species, the “black” rhino.
Don’t think you can outrun a rhino just because they are huge. As it turns out, rhinos are surprisingly fast, being able to reach a speed of 30 mph.
Rhinos have one of the most interesting ways of communicating with each other. They sneeze, snort, scream, and produce all sorts of other different funny noises depending on their mood. Also, studies have found that rhinos can differentiate and learn more about other members of their social group by smelling their poop.
The post Fun Facts About Rhinos You Probably Didn’t Know appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>The post Baby Rhino Makes Public Debut at Zoo Miami appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>“This is certainly the most important birth of the year here at the zoo. Indian rhinos are a vulnerable species,” Zoo Miami spokesman Ron Magill told Local 10.
The baby girl rhino was born on April 23 to a mom that carried her for 15 months in a unique pregnancy. “It’s the first time ever in the world that a birth is the result of induced ovulation combined with artificial insemination, so this is huge because it says a lot about our potential,” said Magill.
The post Baby Rhino Makes Public Debut at Zoo Miami appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>The post Fun Facts About Rhinos You Probably Didn’t Know appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>The Rhino family has five different species: white, black, Indian, Javan, and Sumatran. Javan rhino is the most endangered of them all, with estimates that only 60 specimens exist in the whole world. Sumatran is the smallest, standing at 4 ft 3 in compared to 6.6 ft that white rhino can reach.
Rhino horns are made out of keratin, the same protein that forms human hair and fingernails. The horn constantly grows over the course of the rhino’s life at a pace of 2.5 inches per year.
White rhino and black rhino are two different species, but the difference is not in their color, as they are both grey. White rhino got its name after the African word “wyd,” used to describe the rhino’s characteristic wide upper lip, which was mistakenly understood as “white” by foreigners. To avoid confusion, they named a similar rhino species, the “black” rhino.
Don’t think you can outrun a rhino just because they are huge. As it turns out, rhinos are surprisingly fast, being able to reach a speed of 30 mph.
Rhinos have one of the most interesting ways of communicating with each other. They sneeze, snort, scream, and produce all sorts of other different funny noises depending on their mood. Also, studies have found that rhinos can differentiate and learn more about other members of their social group by smelling their poop.
The post Fun Facts About Rhinos You Probably Didn’t Know appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>The post Baby Rhino Makes Public Debut at Zoo Miami appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
]]>“This is certainly the most important birth of the year here at the zoo. Indian rhinos are a vulnerable species,” Zoo Miami spokesman Ron Magill told Local 10.
The baby girl rhino was born on April 23 to a mom that carried her for 15 months in a unique pregnancy. “It’s the first time ever in the world that a birth is the result of induced ovulation combined with artificial insemination, so this is huge because it says a lot about our potential,” said Magill.
The post Baby Rhino Makes Public Debut at Zoo Miami appeared first on Our Funny Little Site.
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