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The Indian Rhinoceros is a large Asian ungulate. It is an adoptable animal in Wildlife Park 3.

Description[]

The Indian rhinoceros, also known as the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros, is the largest species of rhinoceros in Asia and the second largest overall. Males are larger than females, reaching a body length of 3.8m and weighing up to 2200kg (4850lbs). The Indian rhinoceros can be identified by the large folds of skin on its body that resemble armor-plating, wart-like bumps on its hind legs and the presence of a single horn on its nose.

The Indian rhinoceros is native to the northern regions of the Indian subcontinent, with the largest population being in the Indian state of Assam. It inhabits grasslands and is usually found near water, feeding primarily on grass and aquatic plants. It is normally a solitary species, but individuals will gather peacefully and frequently playfight; real fighting is usually instigated by bulls, using long sharp incisor teeth. Like all rhino species, the Indian rhinoceros is heavily threatened in the wild, with poaching and habitat destruction among its main threats.

Wildlife Park 3[]

The Indian rhinoceros is an adoptable animal in Wildlife Park 3 and was added as part of the Asia expansion pack. Their daily food and enrichment necessities include leaves, grass, water, scratching and wallowing (mud). They can live individually, with 8 as the maximum herd number.

White Indian Rhinoceros[]

Compared to their normal kinds, this variant has a slightly higher price and attractiveness. Their needs remain the same nonetheless.

Diseases[]

These are the list of diseases that the said animal can suffer from:

Anixety Apathy Babesiosis
Bronchitis Caries Conjunctivitis
Cut Deficiency Dehydration
Diarrhea Eczema Gangrene
Gastric Ulcer Iodine Deficiency Mesostigmata
Splinter Tuberculosis Vasculitis
Wry Neck Heat Exhaustion Oil Toxication

Gallery[]

Wildlife Park 3[]

Wildlife Park 3 animals
Base Game African ElephantBengal TigerBisonBlack RhinocerosBlue WildebeestBurchell's ZebraCalifornia Sea LionChimpanzeeCougarElasmotheriumGiant PandaGiraffeGorillaGrizzly BearHippopotamusJaguarKing PenguinLeopardLionMeerkatPolar BearSmilodonSnow LeopardThomson's GazelleWoolly Mammoth
Dino Invasion AnkylosaurusPachycephalosaurusParasaurolophusProtoceratopsStegosaurusStyracosaurusTriceratopsTyrannosaurus RexUtahraptorVelociraptor
Alaska Alaskan King CrabAlaskan MooseArctic FoxArctic WolfBelugaBlack BearBlack-Tailed DeerCanadian LynxCaribouDall SheepHumpback WhaleNarwhalNorthern River OtterOrcaRocky Mountain GoatSnowshoe HareWhite-Sided DolphinWolf
Creatures of the Carribean American CrocodileAmerican FlamingoBlacktip SharkBlue MarlinBluefin TunaBrown PelicanCommon DolphinfishGiant FrogfishGoliath GrouperGreat Hammerhead SharkGreen Sea TurtleHawksbill Sea TurtleLeatherback Sea TurtleManta RayMermaidOcean SunfishParrotfishStriped DolphinTiger SharkWhale Shark
Down Under Australian PelicanBlacktip Reef SharkBull SharkCommon DolphinCommon WombatDingoDwarf SawfishEmuFlatback Sea TurtleFreshwater CrocodileGreat White SharkGreater CormorantKoalaNumbatPerentiePlatypusRed KangarooSouthern CassowaryThylacineWhitetip Reef Shark
Amazonas Amazonian Brown BrocketAmazon River DolphinAmazonian ManateeBlack CaimanBrazilian TapirCapybaraCollared PeccaryGiant AnteaterGuanacoMacraucheniaManed WolfMargayNine-Banded ArmadilloOcelotScarlet IbisSpectacled Bear
Africa African BuffaloBlack-Backed JackalBongoCommon OstrichCommon WarthogDromedaryGiant Sable AntelopeGreater KuduMandrillNile CrocodileOkapiQuaggaRed River HogSouth African OryxSpotted Hyena
Asia Axis DeerBactrian CamelBlackbuckEurasian LynxFishing CatIndian ElephantIndian RhinocerosKomodo DragonMalayan TapirOrangutanPacific WalrusPrzewalski's Wild HorseRed PandaSaigaTakin
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