Berkeley, E.V.; Linklater, W.L. 2006. What do stressed and obese people have in common with black rhinos in captivity?. Aardvark (Newsletter of the Zoological Society of Southern Africa) 2006 October: 6-7, fig. 1.
What do stressed and obese people have in common with black rhinos in captivity?
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. 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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
Marais, L. 2022. Monitoring and controlling aspiration fluid temperature during ovum pick-up in southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum). M.Sc. Thesis presented to the University of Pretoria. pp. 1-122.
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Mtetwa, T.K. 2022. Reliability of methods to determine arterial oxygen-haemoglobin saturation in immobilized southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum). Ph.D. thesis presented to the University of Pretoria. pp. 1-232.