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Latest rhino count a mixed bag for world's five species

August 8, 2025

While Black rhino numbers have grown, other rhino populations face an existential threat, a new report finds. Poaching is on the rise in South Africa, which has more rhinos than anywhere else.

Two white rhinoceros stand under a tree in Kruger National Park, South Africa
While rhino poaching is falling globally, the animals are still at risk Image: Christoph Schöne/Zoonar/picture alliance

The latest global rhino count shows a mixed bag for the world's five rhino species in Africa and Asia.

The numbers of Black rhinos, found only in the wild in eastern and southern Africa, grew from 6,195 to 6,788.

That's according to a report published Thursday by rhino specialist groups and commissioned by the CITES secretariat.

The increase of 593 animals is "a win for this critically imperiled species," the International Rhino Foundation said in reaction to the report.

The global population estimates don't include rhinos in zoos but rather only those in the wild or in national parks.

The number of greater one-horned rhinos, native to northern India and southern Nepal, also nudged upwards slightly from 4,014 to 4,075.

The greater one-horned rhino is a conservation success story — only around 200 of them remained in India at the beginning of the 20th century.

Now, the largest rhino species on earth is considered to be in recovery, the report finds.

Officers count rhinos in India's Kaziranga national park where the population is recoveringImage: Anupam Nath/AP Photo/picture alliance

Indonesia's rhino species on critically endangered

But there is bad news for other rhino species.

Southeast Asia's rhino species, which are only found in Indonesia, "remain on the edge of extinction," according to the report.

The population of the Sumatran rhinos is virtually unchanged from 2022 estimates, with just 34-47 animals remaining.

The smallest and only hairy rhino species in found mostly in the dense tropical forest and lowland swamps of the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

Poaching and habitat loss from palm oil plantations seriously threatens their survival.

And the number of Javan rhinos has dropped significantly from an estimated 76 to just around 50, due entirely to poaching.

There is only one known population of Javan rhinos left, at a national park on the Indonesian island of Java.

White rhinos at risk from poaching

In Africa, the number of white rhinos fell from 15,942 to 15,752.

That's a drop of 190 animals since the last count in 2021, primarily due to increased poaching pressure, extended droughts and management limitations, the report says.

Globally, the illegal trade in rhino horn has decreased in recent years.

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South Africa sees marked rise in rhino poaching

But the rhino report stressed that poaching was taking on a worrying new trend in South Africa, which has more rhinos than anywhere else.

At least 91 rhinos killed in South Africa in the first quarter of 2025 alone.

South Africa currently accounts for two-thirds of illegal rhino horns seized around the word, with most headed for Malaysia and Vietnam.

It is often looking for new ways to deter poachers and one group of scientists launched a project last week to inject radioactive material into the horns of rhinos.

The scientists say it's harmless for the animals but allows horns to be detected by border authorities when they are being smuggled.

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Edited by: Wesley Dockery

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