Two Driving Modes

Parent control and kids manual operation. Children can simply drive the car forward and backward by the foot pedal and steering wheel, while parents can control the car via the 2.4G remote control with 3-speed options for safety.

Safety Assurance

A certified PP structure including 4 spring-suspension wheels and an adjustable safety belt ensures a smooth and safe run on most terrains. Soft-start makes the ride on toy launch and brake slowly so as not to scare your kid from an abrupt operation.

Best Ride-On Gift for Kids

This 12V ride-on truck with a hyper-realistic look, brilliant front/rear/upper LED lights, 2 openable doors, and entertainment design is a popular present for kids aged 3-8 years to start a cool driving journey.

FOR THE FUN OF CHILDREN

Fun with Complete Equipment

Integrated control system including MP3, Bluetooth, FM, USB, SD, and adjustable volume allows your toddlers to cruise with their favourite music or stories. Pressing to make the realistic horn sound, the little one shows an eye-catching coming.

FOR THE FUN OF CHILDREN

CHARACTERISTICS

The Sumatran Rhino is the smallest amongst the living rhinos and the only one of Asian rhinos with two horns. Its shaggy appearance is its best known feature, due to the long, coarse hair covering much of its body. As it grows older, this hair falls out, meaning that its age can, to a certain extent, be determined by how hairy it is. Underneath, its hide has a red undertone, making this rhino unique in appearance. Its hairiness suggests to many scientists that it may be a direct descendant of the woolly rhinoceros, extinct for about 10,000 years. Sumatran Rhinos, along with the Javan rhino, are the most threatened rhino species. Sumatran Rhinos outnumber Javan rhinos, but are more under threat by poaching. They were declared extinct in Malaysia in the wild in 2015.

RANGE AND HABITAT

unique in appearance. Its hairiness suggests to many scientists that it may be a direct descendant of the woolly rhinoceros, extinct for about 10,000 years. Sumatran Rhinos, along with the Javan rhino, are the most threatened rhino species. Sumatran Rhinos outnumber Javan rhinos, but are more under threat by poaching. They were declared extinct in Malaysia in the wild in 2015.

 

DIET

The Sumatran Rhino is a herbivore, eating leaves, young saplings, and plants in secondary growth.

BEHAVIOR

Habits and Lifestyle

Sumatran Rhinos are solitary animals. Males and females both maintain home ranges, which overlap. Males have larger territories than females. When rhinos do meet on occasion, they do not remain together for very long. These animals are well-known for their marking behavior, marking their trails with urine, feces and soil scraps, which act as olfactory and visual signals for passing rhinos. These animals are inexhaustible walkers. They eat before dawn and again before sunset, moving mostly by night. In the daytime they are often found in ponds of rainwater or wallows dug out near streams. They also make patterned seasonal movements, traveling along hills at the time when the lowlands are flooded, and descending during times of cool and relatively dry weather, returning to the high ground to avoid summer insects, in particular horse flies.

Mating Habits

Sumatran Rhinos are polygynous, each male breeding with multiple females during a single year. The mating period is not known. However, most births take place between October and May, which is when the heaviest rainfall occurs. Gestation is thought to be between 12 to 16 months, with the interval between births being at least 3-4 years. A single calf is born, and during the first few days, it is hidden amongst dense vegetation near a salt lick while its mother browses. When it is about two months old, it wanders near its mother. During the first stages of development, calves may associate with each other, but later they become solitary. Weaning occurs at 16-17 months old and calves stay with their mother until they are 2 or 3 years old. They reach maturity by the age of 7-8.

Rare Sumatran Rhino Born in Indonesia a ‘Momentous Occasion’ for Survival of Species

A Sumatran rhino calf born in the Way Kambas National Park, in Sumatra, Indonesia on March 28.


An extremely rare Sumatran rhino has been born in captivity at a sanctuary in Indonesia, according to the government, a triumph for conservation efforts to save the critically endangered animal from extinction.
The female rhino was born at the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary in Way Kambas National Park in Sumatra’s Lampung Province on March 24, according to Indonesia’s Ministry of Environment.
“The birth of the Sumatran rhino is good news amid the efforts of the Indonesian government and partners to increase the Sumatran rhino population,” Wiratno, the director general of conservation at the environment ministry, said in a statement.


Sumatran rhinos, the world’s smallest rhino species, once flourished across Southeast Asia but they are now found only in tiny pockets on Indonesia’s northern island of Sumatra and Indonesian Borneo.


Fewer than 80 Sumatran rhinos remain, according to the International Rhino Foundation (IRF).
In 2019, Malaysia’s last Sumatran rhino died at the Borneo Rhino Sanctuary. The Sumatran rhino was declared extinct in Malaysia in 2015 but the death of the female, called Iman, meant the species had been completely wiped out there.


The calf’s birth in Indonesia last week brings the number of Sumatran rhinos at the sanctuary to eight.


The pregnancy wasn’t an easy process. The mother, a rhino named Rosa, had lost eight previous pregnancies. And the father, Andatu, was the first rhino ever born in captivity in Indonesia, the IRF said.


The captive breeding program at the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary, which the IRF helped build, is the only place in the country “for the Sumatran rhino to breed naturally with the support of technology and collaboration of expertise,” Wiratno said.


The program aims to maintain the survival of the Sumatran rhino by increasing rhino numbers so someday they can be reintroduced into the wild.
“Rosa’s pregnancy represents new hope for this critically endangered species,” Nina Fascione, executive director of the IRF, said in a statement. “This is a momentous occasion for a critically imperiled species. We share the excitement of this birth with the world!”


Multiple factors have contributed to the rhino’s population decline. Initially, it was caused by poaching for their horns, which were coveted as ingredients in traditional Asian medicine. Later, it was exacerbated by fragmented habitats and human encroachment on the environment, which prevent the rhinos from gathering and breeding.


Without intervention, the IRF said the Sumatran rhino will be extinct in a matter of decades.


International rhino experts and the Indonesian government have decided relocating rhinos to a captive breeding program was the only way to save the species.
The Sumatran rhino calf follows the birth of five Javan rhinos–also critically endangered–in the Ujung Kulon National Park in 2021.
There are now only five remaining rhino species worldwide, and all are threatened. Some sub-species have already vanished; the western black rhino, native to western Africa, was declared extinct in 2013 due to poaching. And the last male northern white rhino died in 2020.

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