Glen, I. 2018. Shoot the Messager? How the Secretarybird Sagittarius serpentarius got its names (mostly wrong). Ostrich 89 (3): 287-290.
Shoot the Messager? How the Secretarybird Sagittarius serpentarius got its names (mostly wrong)
Note
LocationSouthern AfricaSubjectHistorySpeciesAll Rhino Species
Related references
Weigl, R. 2015. Longevity of mammals in captivity: from the living collections of the world. Stuttgart, E. Schweizerbart (Kleine Senckenberg-Reihe 48).
Rookmaaker, L.C. 2020. Appendix. Publications by Kees Rookmaaker (b.1953 Amsterdam) = Leendert Cornelis Rookmaaker. In: Twenty years of literature on the rhinoceros 2000-2019. RRC. pp. 333-346.
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Rookmaaker, L.C. 2020. Twenty years of literature on the rhinoceros 2000-2019. Extracted from the Rhino Resource Center (RRC). Rhino Resource Center. pp. 1-346 [unpublished].
PDF download available
Rookmaaker, L.C. 1998. Chapter 9. References (on rhinoceros in captivity). In: Rookmaaker, L.C., The rhinoceros in captivity: a list of 2439 rhinoceroses kept from Roman times to 1994. The Hague. pp. 375-389.
PDF download available
Rookmaaker, L.C. 1998. Chapter 3. Early rhinoceroses in Rome, China and the Near-East. In: Rookmaaker, L.C., The rhinoceros in captivity: a list of 2439 rhinoceroses kept from Roman times to 1994. The Hague. pp. 27-32.
PDF download available
Rookmaaker, L.C. 1998. Chapter 2. Statistics on demography and reproduction. In: Rookmaaker, L.C., The rhinoceros in captivity: a list of 2439 rhinoceroses kept from Roman times to 1994. The Hague. pp. 21-25.
PDF download available
Rookmaaker, L.C. 1998. Chapter 1. Introduction. In: Rookmaaker, L.C., The rhinoceros in captivity: a list of 2439 rhinoceroses kept from Roman times to 1994. The Hague. pp. 1-19.