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Behold This Bonkers Photo of a 2,800-Pound Rhino Dangling Upside Down From a Helicopterpopulation manager for the World Wildlife Foundation's South Africa Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. The project shelters over 400 black rhinos across eighteen sites. For reference, black rhinos ...
Moving endangered rhinos to new areas is a vital part of their conservation. War-torn helicopters from the Vietnam war are airlifting the creatures to safety.
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Why the Right Way To Fly a Rhino Is Upside Down“Really none of this would be possible without helicopters, both in terms of darting and transferring rhinos out of ...
The location is the seventh new habitat established by the WWF's Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. “This was possible because of the far-sightedness of the Eastern Cape Provincial government who ...
Since 2003, WWF’s Black Rhino Range Expansion Project (BRREP) has helped create eight new populations in an effort to increase the number of rhinos in South Africa. These populations reside in KwaZulu ...
population manager for the World Wildlife Foundation's South Africa Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. The project shelters over 400 black rhinos across eighteen sites. For reference ...
Black rhinos are moved around for three reasons, says Ursina Rusch, population manager for the WWF South Africa Black Rhino Range Expansion Project. First, to protect them from poaching.
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