Rare rhinos strike up bro-mance and become best buddies at Doncaster's Yorkshire Wildlife Park

It's a bro-mance rarely seen but Black Rhinos Dayo and Hodari have become inseparable at Doncaster's Yorkshire Wildlife Park.
The rhinos at Yorkshire Wildlife Park have become best buddies.The rhinos at Yorkshire Wildlife Park have become best buddies.
The rhinos at Yorkshire Wildlife Park have become best buddies.

Normally solitary animals, the pair are proving the power of friendship and have become best buddies at the award-winning Branton visitor attraction.

And wallowing around in the mud is always better when there’s two of you to share the fun.

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The critically endangered Black Rhinos were introduced at the park earlier this year and, after initial sparring to test each other, have settled down to become best buddies.

Dayo and Hodari are often seen running around together and have built up a relationship of mutual respect despite it being unusual for males to be live on the same reserves.

“They have become really close and they tend to stay near each other,” says Britt Jensen, hoof stocks team leader at the park.

“Like any young boys, even the best of friends, they like play fighting but they enjoy using all the wallows for a nice mud bath or spend time grazing in their large reserves. Around midday they can often be seen together in their shelter in the reserve having a well-earned snooze.”

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The two-year-old rhinos were introduced to each other at the park’s Into Africa Reserve in June and their behaviour was carefully monitored for signs that they could get along. Unlike White Rhinos, Black Rhinos are solitary in the wild and the rhino reserves at Into Africa were designed with three separate areas so that there were plenty of options if the rhino preferred to be alone.

“Their behaviour towards each other was always positive which encouraged us to look into introducing them to a shared reserve,” adds Jensen. “They gradually spent more and more time together and are now best of friends.

“They had to learn to manoeuvre around each other as they would bump into each other, particularly if something spooked them. Now they are aware of each other’s whereabouts and they run together, side by side rather than into each other.”

Dayo and Hodari weigh in at around 800kg and their weight will increase to 1500kg, the weight of a family estate car, as they mature to their full height of 6ft tall at the shoulder.

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The Black Rhino is a critically endangered species and the population in Africa declined by 96% from 65,000 in 1970 to less than 3,000 by 1993 from a devastating period of poaching for their horns which are used to make ornamental crowns, cups and ceremonial daggers as well as for herbal medicine. Their numbers have recently started to increase and, thanks to conservation projects, reached 5,000 last year.