@Animals R AMAZING! is right, both rhinos are post-reproductive. One male and one female, half-siblings, one is 45 the other is 41. I believe the plan was for the Rhinos to only be housed in 'Elephant Encounter' until the African Savanna was built, but that was 9 years later and I think the keepers thought it would best to leave them in the elephant exhibit for their final years rather than readjusting them to the Savanna. They'll likely be held there until they pass.Does anyone know how many rhinos hogle park has and if they are actively breeding? I can see only one in the media so far.
apparently there are four spaces that the elephants and rhino share.
some of the fencing on media doesn’t definitely look secure for a bull. (Cable fencing with no piping to prevent climbing over, etc).
The exhibit does have four spaces. The first is the east habitat, it features an 11,000-gallon pool that is 10'6 feet deep. The next is a working yard, this is where keepers often do demos. The next is the west habitat which is occupied by the rhinos. Behind the west habitat is a flex yard, off-view. The habitat is no longer capable of holding a bull making breeding difficult. I am not sure how many females the facility is capable of holding, but it's at least four with the rhinos in the mix.
Back when the zoo was named one of the 10 worst by IDA, the zoo made a statement saying "Our current master plan calls for a greater investment in elephants, with bigger barn, additional yards, and large walking paths. We are committed to the species.” So I don't see the zoo giving them up any time soon, but I am not sure how soon they'll update the exhibit, possibly when the rhinos pass?