An alert black rhino. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
![An alert black rhino. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya An alert black rhino. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya](https://image1.masterfile.com/em_w/03/80/77/862-03807728em.jpg)
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Imágenes relacionadas
- Yellow-billed Oxpeckers ride on the back of a black rhino. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
- A female black rhino with her alert calf. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
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- A white rhino with a very long horn. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
- A female white rhino with her calf. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
- White Rhinos grazing on open plains at Solio Game Ranch. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
- A family of White Rhinos, the female with a massive horn. Mweiga, Solio, Kenya
- A black rhino with a fine horn crosses a forest glade in the Aberdare National Park. .
Más imágenes relacionadas
- A juveline black rhino spars with a bull white rhino.
- A male black rhino sniffs the air for a female as a swallow flies overhead.
- A black rhino and calf in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park.A mother normally will drive away her offspring before a new birth. The interval between births is between two and five years. .
- A black rhino and calf in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Their skin colour is the result of the mud-wallows they frequent in the bright red soil of the area.Rhino offspring suckle for up to a year and only begin to take water after 4 to 5 months.
- A black rhino in the Salient of the Aberdare National Park. Its skin colour is the result of the mud-wallows it frequents in the bright red soil of the area.A red-billed oxpecker (Buphagus erythorhynchus) or 'tick bird' perches on the animal's back. As its name implies,it feeds on ticks and blood-sucking flies while keeping wounds on the host animal open.
- A black rhino browsing in Masai-Mara National Reserve.
- A fine White rhino mother and calf in Solio Game Ranch.
- Towards mid-day, white rhinos gather around the shade of an acacia tree to slumber.