posted on 2021-03-17, 09:29authored bySamuel G. Penny, Rachel L. White, Dawn M. Scott, Lynne MacTavish, Angelo P. Pernetta
<p>Rhino
species use their horns in social interactions but also when accessing
resources, rubbing and in interspecific defence. The current poaching crisis
has seen southern white rhinos (<i>Ceratotherium
simum simum</i>) increasingly dehorned as a conservation management practise,
but few studies have evaluated whether the procedure has any behavioural effects.
This study sought to document and describe horn-contingent behaviours during resource
access, wallowing and rubbing in freeranging white rhinos and establish whether
dehorning, also known as horn trimming, impacts on their frequency or function.
Data were collected through camera trapping and field observations at two sites
in South Africa. The results provide no evidence that dehorning disrupts digging
behaviours during mineral consumption or wallowing and suggests that dehorning
is unlikely to have a strong biological impact on resource access. Furthermore,
the frequency of horn-rubbing behaviours did not appear to be influenced by
levels of horn growth. This suggests the procedure has a limited impact on these
aspects of the species’ ecology and provides support that dehorning can be employed
as a management tool to reduce poaching in freeranging populations of white
rhino.</p>