Javan Rhino

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4 min readMay 27, 2022

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Javan Rhino

Facts:

  • STATUS: Critically Endangered
  • POPULATION: Around 60
  • SCIENTIFIC NAME: Rhinoceros sondaicus
  • HEIGHT: 4.6–5.8 feet
  • WEIGHT: 1,984–5,071 pounds
  • LENGTH: 10–10.5 feet
  • HABITATS: Tropical forests

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Only roughly 60 Javan rhinos live in Ujung Kulon National Park in Java, Indonesia, making them the most endangered of the five rhino species. Rhinos from Java once roamed northeast India and Southeast Asia. In 2010, the last Javan rhinoceros in Vietnam was poached.

This species has a single horn that can grow up to 10 inches long and is dusky grey in color. It has a lot of loose folds on its skin that give it the appearance of armor plating. The Javan rhino is similar to the closely related greater one-horned rhinoceros in appearance, but it has a smaller skull and less visible skin folds.

Javan Rhino baby and mom.

Why They Matter

The population in Ujung Kulon National Park is the sole chance for a species on the verge of extinction to survive. Javan rhinos were found in northeast India and the Sunderbans, as well as throughout mainland Southeast Asia and on the island of Sumatra, until the late 19th and early 20th centuries. If the population in Java declines, the species as a whole will go extinct.

Threats

Only one protected area in the world is home to Javan rhinos. The species’ biology is little understood, but because to extensive population monitoring, scientists are beginning to learn more about the species’ ecology and behavior. Due of natural disasters, habitat degradation, diseases, poaching, and possible inbreeding, they are extremely vulnerable to extinction.

Reduced Genetic Diversity

The Javan rhino population’s modest size is a matter for concern. Low genetic diversity and inbreeding could make the species’ long-term survival challenging.

Disasters

Tsunamis are a severe threat to the coastal Ujung Kulon National Park, and a large eruption of the adjacent Anak Krakatau volcano could quickly wipe out most of the park’s inhabitants. The park is also threatened by rising sea levels as a result of climate change.

Javan Rhino mom and baby

Arenga Palm

Parts of the park have been overrun by Arenga palms, diminishing natural forage and habitat quality.

Disease

In recent years, four rhinos, including one young adult female, are suspected to have died of sickness, which was most likely spread by wild cattle in the park and then passed on to the rhinos.

Habitat Degradation

People who live in close proximity to the park are encroaching on and damaging critical rhino habitat. Important economic development near the park, particularly (eco)tourism, puts the park at risk of additional invasion.

baby Javan Rhino

Illegal Wildelife Trade

During colonial times, trophy hunters slaughtered Javan rhinoceros. They were also hunted down as agricultural pests and for their horn, which is highly esteemed in traditional Asian medicine. Poaching is still a serious problem.

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