File:Indian Rhinoceros.jpg

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Indian_Rhinoceros.jpg(680 × 600 pixels, file size: 226 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

A baby, adult female, and immature female (left to right) Indian Rhinoceros at the San Diego Zoo's Wild Animal Park in Escondido, CA. This is an original work created by me and released under the following license: (only the baby rhino here is a male. His name is Soman, born at the San Diego Zoo's Wild Animal Park in late February 2005. The large rhino in the middle is not a male but is actually Soman's mother, named Gulpara. She is the largest Indian rhino currently at the WAP and one of the heaviest known. On the right is an approximately 4-year-old juvenile female rhino, Asha, who is also Gulpara's child. Both of the young rhinos were fathered by Aroun, the lone adult male Indian rhino at the WAP. However, male Indian rhinos are solitary and do not engage in parental care, at least not at the Wild Animal Park.)

Licensing

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File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current09:35, 9 January 2017Thumbnail for version as of 09:35, 9 January 2017680 × 600 (226 KB)127.0.0.1 (talk)<p>A baby, adult female, and immature female (left to right) Indian Rhinoceros at the San Diego Zoo's Wild Animal Park in Escondido, CA. This is an original work created by me and released under the following license: (only the baby rhino here is a male. His name is Soman, born at the San Diego Zoo's Wild Animal Park in late February 2005. The large rhino in the middle is not a male but is actually Soman's mother, named Gulpara. She is the largest Indian rhino currently at the WAP and one of the heaviest known. On the right is an approximately 4-year-old juvenile female rhino, Asha, who is also Gulpara's child. Both of the young rhinos were fathered by Aroun, the lone adult male Indian rhino at the WAP. However, male Indian rhinos are solitary and do not engage in parental care, at least not at the Wild Animal Park.) </p>
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