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Rhinos once roamed many places throughout Europe, Asia, and Africa and were known to early

Europeans who depicted them in cave paintings. At the beginning of the 20th century, 500,000 rhinos
roamed Africa and Asia. By 1970, rhino numbers dropped to 70,000, and today, around 27,000 rhinos
remain in the wild. Very few rhinos survive outside national parks and reserves due to persistent
poaching and habitat loss over many decades. Three species of rhino—black, Javan, and Sumatran—are
critically endangered. Today, a small population of Javan rhinos is found in only one national park on the
northern tip of the Indonesian island of Java. A mainland subspecies of the Javan rhino was declared
extinct in Vietnam in 2011. Successful conservation efforts have led to an increase in the number of
greater one-horned (or Indian) rhinos, from around 200 at the turn of the 20th century to around 3,700
today. The greater one-horned rhino is one of Asia’s biggest success stories, with their status improving
from endangered to vulnerable following significant population increases. However, the species still
remains under threat from poaching for its horn and from habitat loss and degradation.

In Africa, southern white rhinos, once thought to be extinct, now thrive in protected sanctuaries and are
classified as near threatened. But the western black rhino and northern white rhinos have recently
become extinct in the wild. The only two remaining northern white rhino are kept under 24-hour guard
in Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya. Black rhinos have doubled in number over the past two decades from
their low point of fewer than 2,500 individuals, but total numbers are still a fraction of the estimated
100,000 that existed in the early part of the 20th century.

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