Kumar, A.; Das, Asit; Kullu, S.S.; Durge, S.M.; Sharma, A.K. 2021. Utilization of macro-nutrients and minerals in captive greater one-horned rhinoceros fed season-specific diets. Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition 105: 406-417.
The Rhino Document Library
Contains a total of 30289 references.
The RRC website provides access to an extensive database of indexed and tagged references, abstracts and full texts covering all aspects of rhino knowledge. There are no restrictions on language, time period, location or type of publication, including reports and grey literature. Contributions and suggestions are welcome.
Search Tips
Requiring all terms: Use + before each word to require ALL terms in results
+Flynn +1980 finds only references containing both the author and year+translocation +black +rhino requires all three terms to be present
Finding specific phrases: Use quotes for exact matches
"home range" finds the exact phrase only
Excluding terms: Use minus sign to remove unwanted results
translocation -zoo finds translocation studies but excludes zoo transferspopulation -model excludes theoretical modelling papers
Multiple terms: Enter multiple words to find any of them
Results with more matching terms appear first
genetics DNA chromosome finds references with any of these termsResults with more matching terms appear first
Combined search:
"anti-poaching" patrol -tourism finds anti-poaching patrol studies, excluding tourism securityNote: After searching, use filters to narrow by publication year. Use the advanced filtering option to also narrow by author, journal name, species and location.
Proa, M. 2021. Identifying rhinoceroses in museum collections. Academia Letters Article 2179: 1-8. doi.org/10.20935/AL2179
Stratford, K.J.; Guerier, A.S.; Crawford, S.J.; Stratford, S.M.C.; Schmidt-Kuentzel, A.; Bishop, J.M. 2021. Female southern white rhinoceros can select mates to avoid inbreeding. Journal of Heredity 112 (4): 385-390. doi.org/10.1093/jhered/esab028
Kovesi, C. 2021. Luxury’s fragile frontier: The rhinoceros and Venice – an introduction to a special edition. Luxury 8 (1): 1-6. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864592
Kovesi, C. 2021. Gigi Bon, the rhinoceros, Venice, and the unbearable heaviness of being. Luxury 8 (1): 13-39. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864596
Bloom, R. 2021. Gracious hospitable city. Luxury 8 (1): 11-12. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864593
Ridley, G. 2021. One of a kind: Clara the rhinoceros in eighteenth-century Venice and the tale of a missing horn. Luxury 8 (1): 41-58. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864597
Bostock, S. 2021. Clara in Qatar: a new life for a Meissen porcelain rhinoceros. Luxury 8 (1): 59-75. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864598
Zurfluh, A. 2021. The last sacrifice: the potential of a revived Venetian world. Luxury 8 (1): 105-116. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864599
Johnson, L. 2021. Re-inventing magnificence: gaining status from contribution not consumption. Luxury 8 (1): 117-143. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864600
Dickenson, J. 2021. “The circle of life is endless”: Shih Li-Jen’s “King Kong Rhino” in Venice and beyond. Luxury 8 (1): 145-161. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864601
Bloom, R. 2021. The night the rhinos came. Luxury 8 (1): 163-164. doi.org/10.1080/20511817.2020.1864602
Jong, H.N. 2020. Indonesian environment ministry ends WWF partnership amid public spat. www.mongabay.com 29 January 2020: 1-7.
IUCN African Elephant and Rhino Specialist Group 1983. Various articles and notes on conservation and research about elephants and rhinos. African Elephant and Rhino Group Newsletter no. 1: 1-15.
Ghosh, M.; Saha, K.D.; Saha, U.; Roy, S.; Talukder, B. 1992. Archaeological remains from West Bengal, India. In: Fauna of West Bengal, part 2. Calcutta, Zoological Survey of India. pp. 349-381.
Gippoliti, S.; Robovsky, J.; Angelici, F.M. 2021. Taxonomy and translocations of African mammals: a plea for a cautionary approach. Conservation 1: 121–136. doi.org/10.3390/conservation1020011
Anonymous 1892. Rhinoceros on the Mutlah River (Sundarbans, India). Englihsman’s Overland Mail 1892 February 24: 14.
Eikelboom, J.A.J. 2021. Sentinel animals : Enriching artificial intelligence with wildlife ecology to guard rhinos. Dissertation presented to the University of Wageningen, The Netherlands. pp. 1-209.
Madliger, C.L. 2021. Horn today, gone tomorrow—dehorning as an anti-poaching practice for white rhinos. Conservation Physiology 9 (1): 1-2. doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coab012
Kolfschoten, T. van; Turner, E. 1996. Early Middle Pleistocene mammalian faunas from Kärlich and Miesenheim I and their biostratigraphical implications. In: The early Middle-Pleistocene in Europe. Rotterdam, Balkema. pp. 227-253, 10 figs, 5 tab.
Baldwin, T.G. 1910. Animals in the Sundarbans. Zoologist (ser.4) 14: 365-367, in Dodsworth, P.T.L., Mental powers of animals.
Findlay, F.R.N. 1901. The vanishing mammalian fauna of South Africa (from Cape Times). Zoologist (ser.4) 5: 115-117.
Renshaw, G. 1898. Notes on the zoological collections of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Antwerp. Zoologist (ser.4) 3: 316-320.