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World's Rarest Rhino Caught Wrecking Video Camera

Started by Raineyrocks, June 20, 2008, 09:27 AM NHFT

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Raineyrocks

http://www.happynews.com/news/5292008/world-rarest-rhino-caught-wrecking-video-camera.htm


World's Rarest Rhino Caught Wrecking Video Camera

(AP Photo/World Wildlife Fund, HO) :: In this still captured from undated video provided by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), a female Javan Rhino, right, and her calf in Ujung Kulon Wildlife Park, Java island, Indonesia. She was captured on video attacking the camera set up to study the habits of the animal, apparently because she sensed the lens was a threat to her calf, the WWF said Thursday, May 29, 2008. In the first month of operation, cameras have captured two images of the mother and calf, said Adhi Rachmat Hariyadi, head of the Ujung Kulon project for the environmental group. "It is very unusual to catch a glimpse of the Javan Rhino deep inside the rain forest,'' he said, adding the camera was undamaged and put back on its stand the day after the incident.

By Associated Press
Updated: 5/29/2008

JAKARTA, Indonesia

The world's rarest rhino does not like the limelight. A Javan Rhino was captured on video attacking a camera set up in an Indonesian jungle to study the habits of the animal, apparently because she sensed the lens was a threat to her calf, the WWF said Thursday.

There are around 70 Javan Rhinos in the wild, about 60 of which live in Ujung Kulon National Park on the western tip of Java island. The remainder live in Vietnam.

In the first month of operation, five infrared video traps have captured two images of the camera-shy mother and calf, said Adhi Rachmat Hariyadi, head of the Ujung Kulon project for the environmental group.

''It is very unusual to catch a glimpse of the Javan Rhino deep inside the rain forest,'' he said, adding the camera was undamaged and put back on its stand the day after the incident.

WWF officials say they plan to relocate several of the rhinos in the park to another part of Indonesia in the hope that they breed. Otherwise, they fear the species could be wiped out in the event of disease or natural disaster.

Rhino numbers in Indonesia over the past 50 years have been decimated by rampant poaching for horns used in traditional Chinese medicines and destruction of forests by farmers, illegal loggers and palm oil plantation companies.

Apart from the 60 Javan Rhinos, there are thought to be around 300 Sumatran rhinos still alive in isolated pockets in the forests of Malaysia and Sumatra island.

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On the Net:

Rhino attack: http://www.panda.org/index.cfm?uNewsID=135401