Who's new at the zoo

Kande and Winnifred settle into their new home

Posted 8/20/20

Riverbanks Zoo  has 2 new residents.

Kande, age 6, and Winnifred, 2, are female southern white rhinoceros. 

John Davis, director of animal care and welfare at Riverbanks, …

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Who's new at the zoo

Kande and Winnifred settle into their new home

Posted

Riverbanks Zoo has 2 new residents.

Kande, age 6, and Winnifred, 2, are female southern white rhinoceros. 

John Davis, director of animal care and welfare at Riverbanks, reports they began exploring their new yard and getting to know each other.

Kande arrived from Jacksonville Zoo and Winnifred from Tampa’s Busch Gardens in June.

“Learning a new environment is a delicate process for animals and their keepers, and we always move at the animal’s pace,” Davis said.

“For the next several days, our visitors might occasionally see Kande and Winnifred on the rhino yard for brief periods until the two have fully acclimated to their new surroundings.”

The zoo has not had the species since 1989.

The International Rhino Foundation (IRF) estimates about 18,000 individuals remain in the wild most of which are found in the grasslands of southern Africa.

The main threat to the animals is illegal hunting because of the high demand for rhino horn for commercial and medicinal use.

Northern white rhinos are now extinct in the wild because of poaching.

“We are excited to give our members and guests the opportunity to once again connect and interact with these magnificent creatures that, without us, face an uncertain future,” said Thomas Stringfellow, president and CEO of Riverbanks Zoo and Garden.

The two females will be joined by Bill, a 15-year-old male from Seneca Park Zoo in Rochester, New York.

Bill is expected to arrive in the fall. 

The move is part of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) Southern White Rhinoceros Species Survival Plan ® (SSP).

Riverbanks participates in more than 70 SSP programs to help secure a future for threatened and endangered wildlife.

White rhinos are the most social of the 5 species of rhinoceros and the 2nd largest land mammal behind the elephant.

The animals can weigh up to 6,000 lbs. and reach 6 ft. tall.

Despite their massive size, they can run up of 30 miles an hour.

White rhinos are herbivores that use their square upper lip for grazing.

“One of the most exciting features is the large, elevated pavilion in the center of the exhibit where our visitors can experience and admire the rhinos up-close,” said Stringfellow.

Kande, Winnifred, Riverbanks, Zoo. rhinos

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