Indian wildlife sanctuary sees jump in one-horned rhinos

Indian wildlife sanctuary sees jump in one-horned rhinos
A one horn rhino walks through the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, as Indian forestry officials conducted a census of the endangered species in Pobitora, some 45km from Guwahati, on March 18, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 20 March 2018
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Indian wildlife sanctuary sees jump in one-horned rhinos

Indian wildlife sanctuary sees jump in one-horned rhinos

GAUHATI: A tiny wildlife sanctuary in northeastern India has reported a jump in the number of one-horned rhinoceroses.
Pradipta Baruah, supervisor of a census carried out Sunday at the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, says there are now 102 one-horned rhinos living in the park, up from 93 during the last count, in 2012.
The reserve, which is just 38 square kilometers (15 square miles), is outside of the Assam state capital, Gauhati.
India's Kaziranga National Park, also in Assam, is the main home of the one-horned rhino, with more than 2,000.
All of the world's five rhino species are under constant threat from poachers who sell their horns on black markets, often in countries where rhino horn is believed to increase male potency.