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Canada-0-MOTORCYCLES selskapets Kataloger
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Firma Nyheter:
- New science reveals how de-horning black rhinos is changing . . .
New research shows how de-horning black rhinos is affecting their behavior
- Rhino conservation success: Global populations surge to 27,000
Poaching for their horns has been a constant threat to black rhinos, which are native to eastern and southern Africa Despite the odds stacked against them, black rhino populations have demonstrated extraordinary resilience, rising by over 5 percent in only one year Their population was 6,487 by the end of 2022, up from 6,195 in 2021
- Southern Black Rhino - White Oak Conservation
Black rhinoceros were once found over an enormous range throughout sub-Saharan Africa living in deserts, mountains, grasslands, and forests Written accounts by explorers before the turn of the 20th century relate frequent encounters with plentiful numbers of black rhinos Today, black rhino populations hover around 5,600
- Project Rhino - Comprehensive guide on the One Horned Rhino
The Project is now ready to start building a stable rhino population in a second protected area, and are planning to move at least six Indian rhinos from Kaziranga National Park to the Laokhowa-Burachapori Wildlife Sanctuary beginning in 2019-2020 The species has recovered from about 200 animals in the early 1990s to around 2900 today
- Genetic Rescue of the Northern White Rhino - DNA Science
The 1970s and 1980s brought poaching and war By the 1990s and into the new millennium the remaining population of 30 rhinos, in Garamba National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, dwindled as human violence escalated The last northern white rhino born into captivity was in 2000
- The Great Decline: 60 years of religion in one graph
The decline in religiosity over the past 15 years is twice as great as the decline in 1960s and 1970s has once again declined But this decline is much sharper than the decline of 1960s and
- Catastrophic 73% decline in the average size of wildlife . . .
There has been a catastrophic 73% decline in the average size of monitored wildlife populations* in just 50 years (1970-2020), according to WWF’s Living Planet Report (LPR) 2024 The report warns that, as the Earth approaches dangerous tipping points posing grave threats to humanity, a huge collective effort will be required over the next
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