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  2. Meet the People Who Have Removed 83,000 Snares from Wildlife ...

    www.aol.com/meet-people-removed-83-000-215836943...

    It’s like a neutral fund that’s available to anybody as long as they’re doing good work.” Finally, the Wildlife Conservation Network equips the next generation of conservation leaders.

  3. Wildlife Conservation Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_Conservation_Network

    The Fund also supports projects that restore rhino landscapes and bolster protected area management for rhinos in the wild. Organizations supported by the RRF include the Frankfurt Zoological Society, the Mozambique Wildlife Alliance, Tsavo Trust, Wildlife ACT, Save the Rhino Trust Namibia, and the International Rhino Foundation, to name a few.

  4. Oxpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxpecker

    The oxpeckers are two species of bird which make up the genus Buphagus, and family Buphagidae. The oxpeckers were formerly usually treated as a subfamily , Buphaginae, within the starling family, Sturnidae , but molecular phylogenetic studies have consistently shown that they form a separate lineage that is basal to the sister clades containing ...

  5. Rhino Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhino_Man

    Rhino Man is a feature-length documentary about South African field rangers protecting rhinos from poaching by crime syndicates. It's a film by the Global Conservation Corps produced by Friendly Human and directed by John Jurko II , Matt Lindenberg, and Daniel Roberts.

  6. San Diego Zoo Gives Irresistible Close-up of Their New Baby Rhino

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    Rhinos also protect their skin in an unusual way: by befriending oxpeckers. This 8-inch-long bird has a wide bill, stiff tail, and sharp claws. They eat ticks and other insects off of the rhino's ...

  7. Sound of Rhino Popping Open a Watermelon Has People So ... - AOL

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    Another way rhinos protect their skin is by trading services with a bird; they befriend oxpeckers. These 8-inch-long birds have a wide bill, stiff tail, and sharp claws.

  8. Red-billed oxpecker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-billed_oxpecker

    The preferred habitat is open country, and the red-billed oxpecker eats insects. Both the English and scientific names arise from this species' habit of perching on large wild and domesticated mammals such as cattle and eating ticks. [4] This species's relationship with rhinos gives the Swahili name Askari wa kifaru meaning "the rhino's guard". [5]

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