Sumatran Rhinoceros
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rapunzel, a Sumatran Rhino, in the Bronx Zoo
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Dicerorhinus sumatrensis (Fischer, 1814)[2] |
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Dicerorhinus sumatrensis harrissoni |
The Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) is a member of the family Rhinocerotidae and one of five extant rhinoceroses. It is the smallest rhinoceros, standing about 120–145 centimetres (3.9–4.8 ft) high at the shoulder, with a body length of 250 centimetres (98 in) and weight of 500–800 kilograms (1100–1760 lb). Like the African species, it has two horns; the larger is the nasal horn, typically 15–25 centimetres (6–10 in), while the other horn is typically a stub. A coat of reddish-brown hair covers most of the Sumatran Rhino's body.
Members of the species once ranged throughout rainforests, swamps and cloud forests in India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. They are now critically endangered, with only six substantial populations in the wild: four on Sumatra, one on Borneo, and one on peninsular Malaysia. Their numbers are difficult to determine because they are solitary animals that are widely scattered across their range, but they are estimated to number around 300. The decline in the number of Sumatran Rhinoceros is attributed primarily to poaching for their horns, which are highly valued in traditional Chinese medicine, fetching as much as US$30,000 per kilogram on the black market.[4] The rhinos have also suffered from habitat loss as their forests have been cleared for lumber and conversion to agriculture.
The Sumatran Rhino is a mostly solitary animal except for courtship and child-rearing. It is the most vocal rhino species and also communicates through marking soil with its feet, twisting saplings into patterns, and leaving excrement. The species is much better studied than the similarly reclusive Javan Rhinoceros, in part because of a program that brought 40 Sumatran Rhinos into captivity with the goal of preserving the species. The program was considered a disaster even by its initiators, with most of the rhinos dying and no offspring being produced for nearly 20 years, an even worse decline than in the wild.
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[edit] Taxonomy and naming
The first documented Sumatran Rhinoceros was shot 16 kilometres (10 miles) outside Fort Marlborough, near the west coast of Sumatra, in 1793. Drawings of the animal, and a written description, were sent to the naturalist Joseph Banks, then president of the Royal Society of London, who published a paper on the specimen that year. It was not until 1814, however, that the species was given a scientific name, by Johann Fischer von Waldheim, a German scientist and curator of the State Darwin Museum in Moscow, Russia.[5][6]
The scientific name Dicerorhinus sumatrensis comes from the Greek terms di (δι, meaning "two"), cero (σερο, meaning "horn"), and rhinos (ρινος, meaning "nose").[7] Sumatrensis is derived from Sumatra, the island in Indonesia on which the rhinos were first discovered.[8] Carolus Linnaeus originally classified all rhinos in the genus Rhinoceros; therefore the species was originally identified as Rhinoceros sumatrensis. Joshua Brookes considered the Sumatran Rhinoceros, with its two horns, a distinct genus from the one-horned Rhinoceros, and gave it the name Didermocerus in 1828. Constantin Wilhelm Lambert Gloger proposed the name Dicerorhinus in 1841. In 1868, John Edward Gray proposed the name Ceratorhinus. Normally the oldest name would be used, but a 1977 ruling by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature established the proper genus name as Dicerorhinus.[9][2]
There are three subspecies:
- D.s. sumatrensis, known as the Western Sumatran Rhinoceros, has only around 275 rhinos remaining, mostly on western Sumatra. Around 75 may live on Peninsular Malaysia. The main threats against this subspecies are habitat loss and illegal poaching. There is a slight genetic difference between the Western and Eastern Sumatran Rhinos.[10] The rhinos on the Malayan Peninsula were once known as D.s. niger, but were later recognized to be similar to the rhinos on western Sumatra.[2]
- D.s. harrissoni, known as the Eastern Sumatran Rhinoceros or Bornean Rhinoceros, were once common throughout Borneo; now only about 25 individuals are estimated to survive. The known population on Borneo lives in Sabah. There are unconfirmed reports of animals surviving in Sarawak and Kalimantan.[11] This subspecies is named after Tom Harrisson, who worked extensively with Bornean zoology and anthropology in the 1960s.[12] The Bornean species is markedly smaller than the other two.[2]
- D.s. lasiotis, known as the Northern Sumatran Rhinoceros, once roamed in India and Bangladesh but has been declared extinct in these countries. Unconfirmed reports suggest that there may be a small population still surviving in Burma, but the political situation in the country has prevented verification.[13] The name lasiotis is derived from the Greek for "hairy-ears". Later studies showed that their ear-hair was not longer than other Sumatran Rhinos, but D.s. lasiotis remained a subspecies because it was significantly larger than the other subspecies.[2]
[edit] Evolution
Ancestral rhinoceroses first diverged from other Perissodactyls in the Early Eocene. Mitochondrial DNA comparison suggests that the ancestors of modern rhinos split from the ancestors of Equidae around 50 million years ago.[14][15] The extant family, the Rhinocerotidae, first appeared in the Late Eocene in Eurasia, and the ancestors of the extant rhino species dispersed from Asia beginning in the Miocene.[16][4]
The Sumatran Rhinoceros is considered the least derived of the extant species as it shares more traits with its Miocene ancestors.[4] Paleontological evidence in the fossil record dates the genus Dicerorhinus to the Early Miocene, 23–16 million years ago. Molecular dating suggests a split of Dicerorhinus from the other four extant species as far back as 25.9 ± 1.9 million years. Three hypotheses have been proposed for the relationship between the Sumatran Rhinoceros and the other living species. One hypothesis suggests that the Sumatran Rhinoceros is closely related to the Black and White Rhinos in Africa, evidenced by the species having two horns, instead of one.[14] Other taxonomists regard the Sumatran Rhinoceros as a sister taxon of the Indian and Javan Rhinoceros because their ranges overlap so closely.[14][17] A third group of more recent analyses, however, has suggested that the two African rhinos, the two Asian rhinos and the Sumatran Rhinoceros represent essentially three separate lineages that split around 25.9 million years ago, and it may therefore be unclear which group diverged first.[14][18]
Because of morphological similarities, the Sumatran Rhinoceros is believed to be closely related to the Woolly Rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis). The Woolly Rhinoceros, so named for the coat of hair it shares with the Sumatran Rhinoceros, first appeared in China and by the Upper Pleistocene ranged across the Eurasian continent from Korea to Spain. The Woolly Rhinoceros survived the last Ice Age, but like the Woolly Mammoth, most or all became extinct around 10,000 years ago. Although some morphological studies questioned the relationship,[18] recent molecular analysis has supported the two species as sister taxa.[19] Many fossils have been classified as members of Dicerorhinus, but there are no other recent species in the genus.[20]
[edit] Description
A mature Sumatran Rhino stands about 120–145 centimetres (3.9–4.8 ft) high at the shoulder, has a body length of around 250 centimetres (98 in) and weighs 500–800 kilograms (1100–1760 lb), though the largest individuals in zoos have been known to weigh as much as 1,000 kilograms (2,200 lb). Like the African species, it has two horns. The larger is the nasal horn, typically only 15–25 cm (6–10 in), though the longest recorded specimen was much longer at 81 centimetres (32 in).[21] The posterior horn is much smaller, usually less than 10 centimetres (3.9 in) long, and often little more than a knob. The larger nasal horn is also known as the anterior horn; the smaller posterior horn as the frontal horn.[20] The horns are dark gray or black in color. The males have larger horns than the females, though the species is not otherwise sexually dimorphic. The Sumatran Rhino lives an estimated 30–45 years in the wild, while the record time in captivity is a female D. lasiotis who lived for 32 years and 8 months before dying in the London Zoo in 1900.[20]
Two thick folds of skin encircle the body behind the front legs and before the hind legs. The rhino has a smaller fold of skin around its neck. The skin itself is thin, 10–16 mm (0.4–0.6 in), and in the wild the rhino appears to have no subcutaneous fat. Hair can range from dense (the most dense hair in young calves) to scarce and is usually a reddish brown. In the wild this hair is hard to observe because the rhinos are often covered in mud. In captivity, however, the hair grows out and becomes much shaggier, likely because of less abrasion from walking through vegetation. The rhino has a patch of long hair around the ears and a thick clump of hair at the end of the tail. Like all rhinos, they have very poor vision. The Sumatran Rhinoceros is fast and agile; it climbs mountains easily and comfortably traverses steep slopes and riverbanks.[8][21][20]
[edit] Distribution and habitat
The Sumatran Rhinoceros lives in both lowland and highland secondary rainforest, swamps and cloud forests. It inhabits hilly areas close to water, particularly steep upper valleys with a lot of undergrowth. The Sumatran Rhinoceros once inhabited a continuous distribution as far north as Burma, eastern India and Bangladesh. Unconfirmed reports also placed the Sumatran Rhino in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. All known living animals occur in peninsular Malaysia, the island of Sumatra and Sabah, Borneo. Some conservationists have hope that Sumatran Rhinos may still survive in Burma, though it is considered unlikely. Political turmoil in Burma has prevented any assessment or study of possible survivors.[22]
The Sumatran Rhino is widely scattered across its range, much more so than the other Asian rhinos, which has made it difficult for conservationists to protect members of the species effectively.[22] Only six areas are known to contain communities of more than a handful of Sumatran Rhinoceros: Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Gunung Leuser National Park, Kerinci Seblat National Park, and Way Kambas National Park on Sumatra; Taman Negara National Park in Peninsular Malaysia; and the Tabin Wildlife Reserve in Sabah, Malaysia on the island of Borneo.[23][4]
Genetic analysis of Sumatran Rhino populations has identified three distinct genetic lineages.[6] The channel between Sumatra and Malaysia was not as significant a barrier for the rhinos as the Barisan Mountains; thus rhinos on eastern Sumatra and Peninsular Malaysia are more closely related than the rhinos on the other side of the mountains in western Sumatra. The eastern Sumatra and Malaysia rhinos show so little genetic variance that the populations were likely not separate during the Pleistocene. Both populations of Sumatra and Malaysia, however, are close enough genetically that interbreeding would not be problematic. The rhinos of Borneo are sufficiently distinct that conservation geneticists have advised against crossing their lineages with the other populations.[6] Conservation geneticists have recently begun to study the diversity of the gene pool within these populations by identifying microsatellite loci. The results of initial testing found comparable levels of variability within Sumatran Rhino populations and the population of the less endangered African rhinos, but the genetic diversity of Sumatran Rhinos is an area of continuing study.[24]
[edit] Behavior
Sumatran Rhinoceroses are solitary creatures except for coupling before mating and during child rearing. Individuals have home ranges: bulls have territories as large as 50 km2 (19 sq mi) whereas females' ranges are 10–15 km2 (3.9–5.8 sq mi).[8] The ranges of females appear to be spaced apart; male ranges often overlap. There is no evidence that Sumatran Rhinos defend their territory through fighting. Marking their territory is done by scraping soil with their feet, bending saplings into distinctive patterns, and leaving excrement. The Sumatran Rhino is usually most active when eating, at dawn, and just after dusk. During the day the rhino wallows in mud baths to cool down and rest. In the rainy season they move to higher elevation areas; in the cooler months they return to lower areas in their range.[8]
The rhino spends a large part of its day in wallows. When mud holes are unavailable, the rhino will deepen puddles with its feet and horns. The wallowing behavior helps the rhino maintain its body temperature and protect its skin from ectoparasites and other insects. Captive specimens of Sumatran Rhinoceros, deprived of adequate wallowing, have quickly developed broken and inflamed skins, suppurations, eye problems, inflamed nails, hair loss and eventually died. One 20-month study of wallowing behavior found that the Sumatran Rhinoceros will visit no more than three wallows at any given time. After 2–12 weeks using a particular wallow, the rhino will abandon it. Typically, the rhino will wallow around midday for 2–3 hours at a time before venturing out for food. Although in zoos the Sumatran Rhino has been observed wallowing less than 45 minutes a day, the study on wild animals found 80–300 minutes (an average of 166 minutes) per day spent in wallows.[25]
There has been little opportunity to study epidemiology in the Sumatran Rhinoceros. Ticks and gyrostigma were reported to cause deaths in captive animals in the 19th century.[21] The rhino is also known to be vulnerable to the blood disease surra which can be spread by horse-flies carrying parasitic trypanosomes; in 2004, all five rhinos at the Sumatran Rhinoceros Conservation Centre died over an 18-day period after becoming infected by the disease.[26] The Sumatran Rhino has no known predators other than humans. Tigers and wild dogs may be capable of killing a calf, but calves stay close to their mother and the frequency of such killings is unknown. Although the rhino's range overlaps with elephants and tapirs, the species do not appear to compete for food or habitat. Elephants (Elephas maximus) and Sumatran Rhinos are even known to share trails and many smaller species such as deer, boar and wild dogs will use the trails that the rhinos and elephants create.[27][8]
The Sumatran Rhino maintains trails across its range. The trails fall into two types. Main trails will be used by generations of rhinos to travel between important areas in the rhino's range, such as between salt licks, or between areas that are separated by inhospitable terrain. In feeding areas the rhinos will make smaller trails, still covered by vegetation, to areas containing food the rhino eats. Sumatran Rhino trails have been found that cross rivers deeper than 1.5 meters (5 ft) and about 50 meters (165 ft) across. The currents of these rivers are known to be strong, but the rhino is a strong swimmer.[20][21] A relative absence of wallows near rivers in the range of the Sumatran Rhinoceros indicates that they may occasionally bathe in rivers in lieu of wallowing.[27]
[edit] Diet
The Sumatran Rhino eats a wide range of plants such as: (clockwise from top left), Mallotus, mangosteens, Ardisia, and Eugenia.[27][28] |
Most feeding occurs just before nightfall and in the morning. The Sumatran Rhino is a browser and has a diet of young saplings, leaves, fruits, twigs and shoots.[20] The rhinos usually consume up to 50 kg (110 lb) of food a day.[8] Primarily by measuring dung samples, researchers have identified more than 100 food species consumed by the Sumatran Rhinoceros. The largest portion of the diet is tree saplings with a trunk diameter of 1-6 cm (0.4-2.4 inches). The rhinoceros typically pushes these saplings over with its body, walking over the sapling without stepping on it, to eat the leaves. Many of the plant species the rhino consumes exist in only small portions, which indicates that the rhino is frequently changing its diet and feeding in different locations.[27] Among the most common plants the rhino eats are many species from the Euphorbiaceae, Rubiaceae and Melastomataceae families. The most common species the rhino consumes is Eugenia.[28]
The diet of the Sumatran Rhinoceros is high in fiber and only moderate in protein.[29] Salt licks are very important to the nutrition of the rhino. These licks can be small hot springs, seepages of salty water or mud-volcanoes. The salt licks also serve an important social purpose for the rhinos—males visit the licks to pick up the scent of females in oestrus. Some Sumatran Rhinos, however, live in areas where salt licks are not readily available or the rhinos have not been observed using the licks. These rhinos may get their necessary mineral requirements by consuming plants that are rich in minerals.[28][27]
[edit] Communication
Sumatran Rhinoceros vocalizations (.wav files)[30] |
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The Sumatran Rhinoceros is the most vocal of the rhinoceros species.[30] Observations of the species in zoos show the animal almost constantly vocalizing and it is known to do so in the wild as well.[21] The rhino makes three distinct noises: eeps, whales, and whistle-blows. The eep, a short, one-second-long yelp, is the most common sound. The whale, named for its similarity to vocalizations of the Humpback Whale, is the most song-like vocalization and the second most common. The whale varies in pitch and lasts from 4–7 seconds. The whistle-blow is named because it consists of a two-second-long whistling noise and a burst of air in immediate succession. The whistle-blow is the loudest of the vocalizations, loud enough to make the iron bars in the zoo enclosure where the rhinos were studied vibrate. The purpose of the vocalizations is unknown, though they are theorized to convey danger, sexual readiness, and location like other ungulate vocalizations do. The whistle-blow could be heard at a great distance even in the dense brush in which the Sumatran Rhino lives. A vocalization of similar volume from elephants has been shown to carry 9.8 km (6.1 miles) and thus the whistle-blow may carry as far.[30] The Sumatran Rhinoceros will sometimes twist saplings that they do not eat. This twisting behavior is believed to be used as a form of communication, frequently indicating a junction in a trail.[27]
[edit] Reproduction
Females become sexually mature at the age of 6–7 years, while males become sexually mature at about 10 years old. The gestation period is around 15–16 months. The calf, which typically weighs 40–60 kg (88–132 lb), is weaned after about 15 months and stays with the mother for the first 2–3 years of its life. In the wild, the birth interval for this species is estimated to be 4–5 years; its natural child-rearing behavior is unstudied.[8]
The reproductive habits of the Sumatran Rhinoceros have been studied in captivity. Sexual relationships begin with a courtship period characterized by increased vocalization, tail raising, urination and increased physical contact, with both male and female using their snouts to bump the other in the head and genitals. The pattern of courtship is most similar to that of the Black Rhinoceros. Young Sumatran Rhino males are often too aggressive with females, sometimes injuring and even killing them during the courtship. In the wild, the female could run away from an overly aggressive male, but in their smaller captive enclosures they cannot; this inability to escape aggressive males may partly contribute to the low success rate of captive breeding programs.[31][32][33]
The period of oestrus itself, when the female is receptive to the male, lasts about 24 hours and observations have placed its recurrence between 21–25 days. Rhinos in the Cincinnati Zoo have been observed copulating for 30–50 minutes, similar in length to other rhinos; observations at the Sumatran Rhinoceros Conservation Centre in Malaysia have shown a briefer copulation cycle. As the Cincinnati Zoo has had successful pregnancies, and other rhinos also have lengthy copulatory periods, a lengthy rut may be the natural behavior.[31] Though researchers observed successful conceptions, all these pregnancies ended in failure for a variety of reasons until the first successful captive birth in 2001; studies of these failures at the Cincinnati Zoo discovered that the Sumatran Rhino's ovulation is induced by mating and that it had unpredictable progesterone levels.[34] Breeding success was finally achieved in 2001 by providing a pregnant rhino with supplementary progestin.[35]
[edit] Conservation
Sumatran Rhinoceroses were once quite numerous throughout Southeast Asia. Now only an estimated 300 individuals remain. Though not as rare as the Javan Rhinoceros, the Sumatran Rhinoceros faces greater poaching and habitat pressures and its populations are fragmented and small, whereas a substantial population of Javan Rhinoceros live together on the Ujung Kulon peninsula in Java. While the number of Javan Rhinos in Ujung Kulon has remained relatively stable, Sumatran Rhino populations are believed to be on the decline. It is classed as critically endangered primarily due to illegal poaching and destruction of its rainforest habitat. Most remaining habitat is in inaccessible mountainous areas of Indonesia.[36][37]
Poaching of Sumatran Rhinoceros, though less of a problem than with African Rhinoceros (least in terms of number of animals killed), is cause for concern because dealers are likely speculating that if the species becomes extinct then the price of its horn, estimated as high as $30,000 per kilogram,[4] could dramatically increase. The Sumatran Rhinoceros was never intensively hunted by European hunters. The rhinos are difficult to observe and hunt directly (one field researcher spent seven weeks in a treehide near a salt lick without ever observing a rhino directly), so poachers make use of spear traps and pit traps. In the 1970s, uses of the rhinoceros's body parts among the local people of Sumatra were documented, such as the use of rhino horns in amulets and a folk-belief that the horns offer some protection against poison. Dried rhinoceros meat was used as medicine for diarrhea, leprosy and tuberculosis. "Rhino-oil," a concoction made from leaving a rhino's skull in coconut oil for several weeks, may be used to treat skin diseases. The extent of use and belief in these practices is not known.[27][21][22] It was once believed that rhinoceros horn was widely used as an aphrodisiac; in fact traditional Chinese medicine never used it for this purpose.[4]
The rain forests of Indonesia and Malaysia, which the Sumatran Rhino inhabits, are also targets for legal and illegal logging because of the desirability of their hardwoods. Rare woods like merbau, meranti and semaram are valuable on the international markets, fetching as much as $1,800 per m3 ($1,375 per cu yd). Enforcement of illegal-logging laws is difficult because humans live within or nearby many of the same forests as the rhino. The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake has been used to justify new logging. Although the hardwoods in the rain forests of the Sumatran Rhino are destined for international markets and not widely used in domestic construction, the number of logging permits for these woods has increased dramatically because of the tsunami.[23]
[edit] In captivity
Though rare, Sumatran Rhinoceroses have been occasionally exhibited in zoos for nearly a century and a half. The London Zoo acquired two Sumatran Rhinoceros in 1872. One of these, a female named Begum, was captured in Chittagong in 1868 and survived at the London Zoo until 1900, the record lifetime in captivity for Sumatran Rhinos. At the time of their acquisition, Philip Sclater, the secretary of the Zoological Society of London claimed that the first Sumatran Rhinoceros in zoos had been in the collection of the Zoological Garden of Hamburg since 1868. Before the extinction of the subspecies Dicerorhinus sumatrensis lasiotis, at least seven specimens were held in zoos and circuses.[21] Sumatran Rhinos, however, did not thrive outside their native habitats. A rhino in the Calcutta Zoo successfully gave birth in 1889, but for the entire 20th century not one Sumatran Rhino was born in a zoo. In 1972, the only Sumatran Rhino remaining in captivity died at the Copenhagen Zoo.[21]
Despite the species' persistent lack of reproductive success, in the early 1980s some conservation organizations began a captive breeding program for the Sumatran Rhinoceros. Between 1984 and 1996 this ex situ conservation program transported 40 Sumatran Rhinos from their native habitat to zoos and reserves across the world. While hopes were initially high, and much research was conducted on the captive specimens, by the late 1990s not a single rhino had been born in the program and most of its proponents agreed the program had been a failure. In 1997, the IUCN's Asian Rhino specialist group, which once endorsed the program, declared that it had failed "even maintaining the species within acceptable limits of mortality," noting that, in addition to the lack of births, 20 of the captured rhinos had died.[22][4] In 2004, a surra outbreak at the Sumatran Rhinoceros Conservation Centre killed all the captive rhinos in peninsular Malaysia, reducing the population of captive rhinos to eight.[26][37]
Seven of these captive rhinos were sent to the United States (the others were kept in Southeast Asia), but by 1997, their numbers had dwindled to three: a female in the Los Angeles Zoo, a male in the Cincinnati Zoo, and a female in the Bronx Zoo. In a final effort, the three rhinos were united in Cincinnati. After years of failed attempts, the female from Los Angeles, Emi, became pregnant for the sixth time, with the zoo's male Ipuh. All five of her previous pregnancies ended in failure. But researchers at the zoo had learned from previous failures, and, with the aid of special hormone treatments, Emi gave birth to a healthy male calf named Andalas (an Indonesian literary word for "Sumatra") in September 2001.[38] Andalas's birth was the first successful captive birth of a Sumatran Rhino in 112 years. A female calf, named Suci (Indonesian for "pure"), followed on July 30, 2004.[39] On April 29, 2007, Emi gave birth a third time, to her second male calf, named Harapan (Indonesian for "hope") or Harry.[40][35] In 2007, Andalas, who had been living at the Los Angeles Zoo, was returned to Sumatra to take part in breeding programs with healthy females.[41][33]
Despite the recent successes in Cincinnati, the captive breeding program has remained controversial. Proponents argue that zoos have aided the conservation effort by studying the reproductive habits, raising public awareness and education about the rhinos, and helping raise financial resources for conservation efforts in Sumatra. Opponents of the captive breeding program argue that losses are too great; the program too expensive; removing rhinos from their habitat, even temporarily, alters their ecological role; and captive populations cannot match the rate of recovery seen in well-protected native habitats.[33][4]
[edit] Cultural depictions
Aside from those few individuals kept in zoos and pictured in books, the Sumatran Rhinoceros has remained little known, overshadowed by the more common Indian, Black and White rhinos. Recently, however, video footage of the Sumatran Rhinoceros in its native habitat and in breeding centers has been featured in several nature documentaries. Extensive footage can be found in an Asia Geographic documentary The Littlest Rhino. Natural History New Zealand showed footage of a Sumatran rhino, shot by freelance Indonesian-based cameraman Alain Compost, in the 2001 documentary The Forgotten Rhino, which featured mainly Javan and Indian rhinos.[42][43]
Though documented by droppings and tracks, pictures of the Bornean Rhinoceros were first taken and widely distributed by modern conservationists in April of 2006 when camera traps photographed a healthy adult in the jungles of Sabah in Malaysian Borneo.[44] On April 24, 2007 it was announced that cameras had captured the first ever video footage of a wild Bornean Rhino. The night-time footage showed the rhino eating, peering through jungle foliage, and sniffing the film equipment. The World Wildlife Fund which took the video has used it in efforts to convince local governments to turn the area into a rhino conservation zone.[45][46]
A number of folk tales about the Sumatran Rhino were collected by colonial naturalists and hunters from the mid 1800s to early 1900s. In Burma, the belief was once widespread that the Sumatran Rhino ate fire. Tales described the fire-eating rhino following smoke to its source, especially camp-fires, and then attacking the camp. There was also a Burmese belief that the best time to hunt was every July when the Sumatran Rhinos would congregate beneath the full moon. In Malaya it was said that the rhino's horn was hollow and could be used as a sort of hose for breathing air and squirting water. In Malaya and Sumatra it was once believed that the rhino shed its horn every year and buried it under the ground. In Borneo, the rhino was said to have a strange carnivorous practice: after defecating in a stream it would turn around and eat fish that had been stupefied by the excrement.[21]
[edit] References
- ^ Asian Rhino Specialist Group (1996). Dicerorhinus sumatrensis. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2007. Retrieved on January 13, 2008. Listed as Critically Endangered (CR A1bcd, C2a v2.3).
- ^ a b c d e Rookmaaker, L.C. (1984). "The taxonomic history of the recent forms of Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)". Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 57 (1): 12–25.
- ^ Derived from range maps in:
- Foose, Thomas J. and van Strien, Nico (1997), Asian Rhinos – Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan., IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, UK, ISBN 2-8317-0336-0
and - Dinerstein, Eric (2003). The Return of the Unicorns; The Natural History and Conservation of the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-08450-1.
This map does not include unconfirmed historical sightings in Laos and Vietnam or possible remaining populations in Burma.
- Foose, Thomas J. and van Strien, Nico (1997), Asian Rhinos – Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan., IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, UK, ISBN 2-8317-0336-0
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dinerstein, Eric (2003). The Return of the Unicorns; The Natural History and Conservation of the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-08450-1.
- ^ Rookmaaker, Kees (2005). "First sightings of Asian rhinos", in Fulconis, R.: Save the rhinos: EAZA Rhino Campaign 2005/6. London: European Association of Zoos and Aquaria, 52.
- ^ a b c Morales, Juan Carlos; Patrick Mahedi Andau, Jatna Supriatna, Zainuddin Zainal-Zahari, and Don J. Melnick (1997). "Mitochondrial DNA Variability and Conservation Genetics of the Sumatran Rhinoceros". Conservation Biology 11 (2): 539–543. doi: .
- ^ Liddell, Henry G.; and Robert Scott (1980). Greek-English Lexicon, Abridged Edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-910207-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g van Strien, Nico (2005). "Sumatran rhinoceros", in Fulconis, R.: Save the rhinos: EAZA Rhino Campaign 2005/6. London: European Association of Zoos and Aquaria, 70–74.
- ^ International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (1977). "Opinion 1080. Didermocerus Brookes, 1828 (Mammalia) suppressed under the plenary powers". Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, 34:21–24.
- ^ Asian Rhino Specialist Group (1996). Dicerorhinus sumatrensis ssp. sumatrensis. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2007. Retrieved on January 13, 2008.
- ^ Asian Rhino Specialist Group (1996). Dicerorhinus sumatrensis ssp. harrissoni. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2007. Retrieved on January 13, 2008.
- ^ Groves, C.P. (1965). "Description of a new subspecies of Rhinoceros, from Borneo, Didermocerus sumatrensis harrissoni". Saugetierkundliche Mitteilungen 13 (3): 128–131.
- ^ Asian Rhino Specialist Group (1996). Dicerorhinus sumatrensis ssp. lasiotis. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2007. Retrieved on January 13, 2008.
- ^ a b c d Tougard, C.; T. Delefosse, C. Hoenni, and C. Montgelard (2001). "Phylogenetic relationships of the five extant rhinoceros species (Rhinocerotidae, Perissodactyla) based on mitochondrial cytochrome b and 12s rRNA genes". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 19 (1): 34–44. doi: .
- ^ Xu, Xiufeng; Axel Janke, and Ulfur Arnason (1996). "The Complete Mitochondrial DNA Sequence of the Greater Indian Rhinoceros, Rhinoceros unicornis, and the Phylogenetic Relationship Among Carnivora, Perissodactyla, and Artiodactyla (+ Cetacea)". Molecular Biology and Evolution 13 (9): 1167–1173.
- ^ Lacombat, Frédéric (2005). "The evolution of the rhinoceros", in Fulconis, R.: Save the rhinos: EAZA Rhino Campaign 2005/6. London: European Association of Zoos and Aquaria, 46–49.
- ^ Groves, C. P. (1983). "Phylogeny of the living species of rhinoceros.". Zeitschrift fuer Zoologische Systematik und Evolutionsforschung 21: 293–313.
- ^ a b Cerdeño, Esperanza (1995), “Cladistic Analysis of the Family Rhinocerotidae (Perissodactyla)”, Novitates (American Museum of Natural History) (no. 3143), ISSN 0003-0082, <http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/dspace/bitstream/2246/3566/1/N3143.pdf>
- ^ Orlando, Ludovic; Jennifer A. Leonard, Aurélie Thenot, Vincent Laudet, Claude Guerin, and Catherine Hänni (September 2003). "Ancient DNA analysis reveals woolly rhino evolutionary relationships". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 28 (2): 485–499. doi: .
- ^ a b c d e f Groves, Colin P., and Fred Kurt (1972). "Dicerorhinus sumatrensis". Mammalian Species (21): 1–6. doi: .
- ^ a b c d e f g h i van Strien, N.J. (1974). "Dicerorhinus sumatrensis (Fischer), the Sumatran or two-horned rhinoceros: a study of literature". Mededelingen Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 74 (16): 1–82.
- ^ a b c d Foose, Thomas J. and van Strien, Nico (1997), Asian Rhinos – Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan., IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, UK, ISBN 2-8317-0336-0
- ^ a b Dean, Cathy; Tom Foose (2005). "Habitat loss", in Fulconis, R.: Save the rhinos: EAZA Rhino Campaign 2005/6. London: European Association of Zoos and Aquaria, 96–98.
- ^ Scott, C.; T.J. Foose, C. Morales, P. Fernando, D.J. Melnick, P.T. Boag, J.A. Davila, P.J. Van Coeverden de Groot (2004). "Optimization of novel polymorphic microsatellites in the endangered Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)". Molecular Ecology Notes 4: 194. doi: .
- ^ Julia Ng, S.C.; Z. Zainal-Zahari, and Adam Nordin (2001). "Wallows and Wallow Utilization of the Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus Sumatrensis) in a Natural Enclosure in Sungai Dusun Wildlife Reserve, Selangor, Malaysia". Journal of Wildlife and Parks 19: 7–12.
- ^ a b Vellayan, S.; Aidi Mohamad, R.W. Radcliffe; L.J. Lowenstine, J. Epstein, S.A. Reid, D.E. Paglia, R.M. Radcliffe, T.L. Roth, T.J. Foose, M. Khan, V. Jayam, S. Reza, and M. Abraham (2004). "Trypanosomiasis (surra) in the captive Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis sumatrensis) in Peninsular Malaysia". Proceedings of the International Conference of the Association of Institutions for Tropical Veterinary Medicine 11: 187–189.
- ^ a b c d e f g Borner, Markus (1979). A field study of the Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis Fischer, 1814: Ecology and behaviour conservation situation in Sumatra. Zurich : Juris Druck & Verlag. ISBN 3260046003.
- ^ a b c Lee, Yook Heng; Robert B. Stuebing, and Abdul Hamid Ahmad (1993). "The Mineral Content of Food Plants of the Sumatran Rhino (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) in Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia". Biotropica 3 (5): 352–355.
- ^ Dierenfeld, E.S.; A. Kilbourn, W. Karesh, E. Bosi, M. Andau, S. Alsisto (2006). "Intake, utilization, and composition of browses consumed by the Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis harissoni) in captivity in Sabah, Malaysia". Zoo Biology 25 (5): 417–431. doi: .
- ^ a b c von Muggenthaler, Elizabeth; Paul Reinhart, Brad Limpany, and R. Barton Craft (2003). "Songlike vocalizations from the Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)". Acoustics Research Letters Online 4 (3): 83. doi: .
- ^ a b Zainal Zahari, Z.; Y. Rosnina, H. Wahid, K.c. Yap, and M.R. Jainudeen (2005). "Reproductive behaviour of captive Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)". Animal Reproduction Science 85: 327–335. doi: .
- ^ Zainal-Zahari, Z.; Y. Rosnina, H. Wahid, and M. R. Jainudeen (2002). "Gross Anatomy and Ultrasonographic Images of the Reproductive System of the Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis)". Anatomia, Histologia, Embryologia: Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series C 31 (6): 350–354. doi: .
- ^ a b c Roth, T.L.; R.W. Radcliffem, and N.J. van Strien (2006). "New hope for Sumatran rhino conservation (abridged from Communique)". International Zoo News 53 (6): 352–353.
- ^ Roth, T.L.; J.K. O'Brien, M.A. McRae, A.C. Bellem, S.J. Romo, J.L. Kroll and J.L. Brown (2001). "Ultrasound and endocrine evaluation of the ovarian cycle and early pregnancy in the Sumatran rhinoceros, Dicerorhinus sumatrensis". Reproduction 121: 139–149.
- ^ a b Roth, T.L. (2003). "Breeding the Sumatran rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) in captivity: behavioral challenges, hormonal solutions". Hormones and Behavior 44: 31.
- ^ Rabinowitz, Alan (1995). "Helping a Species Go Extinct: The Sumatran Rhino in Borneo". Conservation Biology 9 (3): 482–488. doi: .
- ^ a b van Strien, Nico J. (2001). "Conservation Programs for Sumatran and Javan Rhino in Indonesia and Malaysia". Proceedings of the International Elephant and Rhino Research Symposium, Vienna, June 7–11, 2001. Scientific Progress Reports.
- ^ Andalas - A Living Legacy. Cincinnati Zoo. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ It's a Girl! Cincinnati Zoo's Sumatran Rhino Makes History with Second Calf. Cincinnati Zoo. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Meet "Harry" the Sumatran Rhino!. Cincinnati Zoo. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ Watson, Paul. "A Sumatran rhino's last chance for love", The Los Angeles Times, April 26, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-11-04.
- ^ The Littlest Rhino. Asia Geographic. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
- ^ The Forgotten Rhino. NHNZ. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
- ^ "Rhinos alive and well in the final frontier", New Straits Times (Malaysia), July 2, 2006.
- ^ "Rhino on camera was rare sub-species: wildlife group", Agence France Presse, April 25, 2007.
- ^ Video of the Sumatran Rhinoceros is available on the World Wildlife Fund web site.
[edit] External links
- Sumatran Rhino Info & Sumatran Rhino Pictures on the Rhino Resource Center
- Sumatran Rhino at Arkive.
- Information on the Sumatran Rhino from the International Rhino Foundation
- Asian Rhino Foundation
- Rhino iCam at the Cincinnati Zoo
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