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Your use of this website is subject to WWF’s Privacy Policy and Site Terms. This
website monitors and stores data such as cookies for quality assurance, to
personalize and enhance your experience, and for analytics. Please review the
linked documents for details, including information about how this site or its
third-party tools process personal data. Continued use of the site constitutes
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RHINO QUIZ


Richard Barrett / WWF-UK


TAKE OUR RHINO QUIZ!

Rhinos have existed for millions of years, but today all five species are under
threat from poachers and habitat loss. WWF plays a vital role in conserving
rhinos, and you can too.

How much do you know about rhinos?

Start
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Question 1 of 8:

naturepl.com/Tui De Roy/WWF


HOW LONG HAVE RHINOS WALKED THE EARTH?

Answer Options
90 million years
55 million years
35 million years
10 million years

Rhinos are one of the oldest groups of mammals on Earth. Today, there are five
species of rhinos. Two of these species (black and white rhinos) are native to
Africa. The other three (Javan, Sumatran, and greater one-horned rhinos) are
native to Asia. All five rhino species have horns. The word rhinoceros comes
from ancient Greek: rhino (nose) and ceros (horn).

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Question 2 of 8:




WHICH OF THESE IS A BLACK RHINO?

Answer Options
Ola Jennersten/WWF-Sweden
Gordon Congdon/WWF
Kinjal Vasavada
Robin Moore

The black rhino is the smaller of the two African rhino species, weighing up to
around 3,000 pounds. Both black and white rhinos have two horns. While they
differ in several ways, the easiest way to tell who’s who is by looking at the
shape of the mouth. White rhinos have a wide, square upper lip that’s ideal for
grazing on grasses. Black rhinos are browsers and have a prehensile pointed
upper lip—perfect for bringing shrubs and tree branches to their mouth.

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Question 3 of 8:

Martin Harvey/WWF


WHAT IS A GROUP OF RHINOS CALLED?

Answer Options
Crash
Swarm
Camp
Wisdom

Female rhinos tend to be more sociable than the more solitary, territorial
males. Together, a group of rhinos is called a crash. Female rhinos are called
cows, and males are bulls. Their young are calves.

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Question 4 of 8:




RHINOS AND ONE OF THESE SPECIES HAVE A SYMBIOTIC (MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL)
RELATIONSHIP. WHICH SPECIES?

Answer Options
Jorge Sierra/WWF-Spain

Greater flamingo

Peter Chadwick/WWF

Red-billed oxpecker

Adriano Gambarini/WWF-US

Green-headed tanager

Sarah Pietrkiewicz

Short-eared owl

Black rhinos have developed a special, mutualistic relationship with different
bird species, including red-billed oxpeckers and cattle egrets. The so-called
cleaner birds often hitch a ride and feed on ticks and other parasites on
rhinos' skin.

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Question 5 of 8:

Shutterstock/Volodymyr Burdiak/WWF-Sweden


APPROXIMATELY HOW MANY RHINOS LIVE IN THE WILD?

Answer Options
500,000
220,000
95,000
27,000

At the beginning of the 20th century, there were about half a million rhinos in
the wild. By 1970, rhino numbers dropped to 70,000, and today, around 27,000
rhinos remain in the wild. Very few rhinos survive outside national parks and
reserves due to poaching and habitat loss over many decades. WWF plays a vital
role in conserving rhinos and helping populations grow. After a dramatic decline
last century, black rhino numbers have more than doubled—today, there are more
than 6,000 in the wild.

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Question 6 of 8:

Michel Gunther/WWF


WHAT ARE RHINO HORNS MADE OF?

Answer Options
Bone
Keratin
Cartilage
Skin

Rhino horns are made of keratin—just like human hair and fingernails. As part of
international wildlife crime networks, poachers kill rhinos to meet consumer
demand for their horns. The horns are often ground up and used in traditional
medicine as alleged cures for a range of ailments from fevers to cancer to
hangovers. They're also used as status symbols. It has been illegal to trade
rhino horn internationally since 1977.

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Question 7 of 8:

CreativeLAB/WWF-US


HOW DOES WWF HELP PROTECT RHINOS FROM EXTINCTION?

Answer Options
Supports community-based conservation
Helps relocate rhinos to safer areas
Works to reduce demand for rhino horn and tackle illegal trade
All of the above and more

With 60 years of experience, we know that successful rhino conservation requires
a comprehensive approach that brings together the world’s leading experts,
governments, local communities, and other partners to save and recover these
species. We can only do this critical work with support from people like you.

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Question 8 of 8:

naturepl.com/Will Burrard-Lucas/WWF


HOW CAN YOU HELP PROTECT RHINOS?

Answer Options
Never buy illegal wildlife products like rhino horns
Share your passion about rhino conservation with friends and family
Support WWF's global conservation efforts
All of the above

Thank you for caring about rhinos. If you want to act right now to help save
black rhinos, complete this quiz and make a donation to support our emergency
antipoaching campaign. Your gift will be MATCHED, and every dollar will
strengthen rhino conservation in Namibia's Etosha National Park—where more than
a dozen rhinos have been poached this year.

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