Rhino escapse Monarto Zoo pen in search for mate | The Australian
Amorous rhino in zoo escape - Yahoo!7 News
A randy rhinoceros escaped its enclosure today and went looking for love - but has been sedated near a perimeter fence.
The escapee - an 18-year-old male white rhino named Satara - was reported to have escaped Monarto Zoo, east of Adelaide, around just after 1pm (CST) today.
Relieved zoo keepers then reported the amorous animal lacked an adequate sense of direction and was not able to gain access to the female object of his desire, AdelaideNow reports.
The rhino was tranquilised by zookeepers just inside the zoo's perimeter fence - and they now face the challenge of figuring out how to move the giant African mammal back to its enclosure.
Satara is part of the international breeding program for endangered rhinos at Monarto.
The zoo has been closed for the rest of the day.
Amorous rhino in zoo escape - Yahoo!7 News
Zoo staff have used a helicopter to track an escaped white rhinoceros at an open range zoo, south-east of Adelaide.
Chief executive of Zoos South Australia , Chris West, says the amorous rhinoceros, known as Satara, broke out of his wood and steel enclosure at Monarto Zoo, near Murray Bridge, trying to reach a pair of female rhinos.
Mr West says the rhino remained within a fenced zone, so posed no threat to wider public safety.
"It was before zoo opening times so as soon as there'd been a realisation then we'd have secured the whole site," he said.
The zoo staff said a media contingent behind a wire fence was at some risk by not leaving the area during the chase.
Keepers fired several tranquiliser shots and eventually calmed the animal down, allowing him to be shephered into another enclosure.
Satara is about 18 and was caught in the wild in Kruger National Park in Africa to be brought to Australia about six years ago.