Thanks O.C.Good luck with the search @CheeseChameleon2007 !
Thanks O.C.Good luck with the search @CheeseChameleon2007 !
http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/151/1511192682.pdf
Okay, this is definitely the picture that I remember, No cross-sections into the head though, Maybe I was imagining things. Now, I dont remember the picture of the porcupine, or any of the text either. I am a little confused on how I still saw a book with this Picture in it. It wasn't this short article at all, but this picture was inserted into perhaps another anatomy book.
Yes, I saw it in a different book however, but again, I have no Idea where I got that book.So that is a picture of a Sumatran rhino at the London Zoo, taken at the turn of the 20th century I'm guessing.
Yes, I saw it in a different book however, but again, I have no Idea where I got that book.
I think you are right, however, In my first posts I said I distinctly remember seeing a drawing of a Sumatran rhino. This is the picture, I can confirm, because when I was younger I mainly just stared at the pictures of animals for a while, without reading the words too much, and I couldn't really tell with black-and-white photos weather they were drawings or photographs.I think that picture was probably a very commonly used one in reference books throughout the early 20th century as this was before pictures of the species were obtainable in the wild due to advances in photographic technology and I don't think there were too many Sumatran rhinos being kept in zoos.
- Arabian oryx - Had read every book and every article I was able to find about the saving of this species in the 1970s and 1980s and had never dreamed to see them one day alive. Then at the beginning of the 1980s some animals came from the world-herd to Europe and I saw my first ones at Rotterdam Zoo. Since that day they realy belong to my all-time favorites !
I think I'd have to choose the Greater Kudu. I really like their stripes and spiraled horns.
Prettiest ungulate is 100% the Red-hartebeest.
The best looking has to be the sable antelope
Sometimes, I don't have any but would love to keep this species in the future.Thank you for sharing Nix !
Do you see these often in the wild ?
The reason why I chose the sable is because of the striking sexual dimorphism, and also that adults can give a lioness a run for its moneyThanks for sharing Javier !
Why the sable ?