black rhino

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Black Rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black Rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Endangered African Black Rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Adult black rhino silhouette Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black Rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Rhinoceros Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black and white linear paint draw rhino vector illustration Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black rhino
Black rhino head portrait, etosha nationalpark, namibia Royalty Free Stock Photo
Small black rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black and white rhino Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black Rhino mother and calf Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black Rhino and calf Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black rhino in the wild 11 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black rhino charging the camera Royalty Free Stock Photo
The black rhino or hook-lipped rhinocerus -Diceros bicornis- in Etosha National Park, Namibia. The black rhino, like its white cousin, is not actually black. The name is derived from an Africaans-language term about its lip, which is the way to distinguish the two rhinos along with their nostrils position. The Black Rhino is one of the Big Five mammals. The name comes from the infamous era of big game hunting and the five animals group was coined due to the difficulty to hunt them on foot. The black rhino thrives now in Namibian reservations, a country praised for its positive ecological measures.


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