Well... it is obviously an herbivore, so plants(sort of an easy question).
The Indian Rhino is two horned while the African rhino is one horned.
No, it is the second biggest after the White Rhino.
An Indian Rhino's territory are from 2km2 to 8km2 and often overlap with other rhino's territory.
Yes. The Indian rhino is fully protected, as are all rhino species.
There is no such thing as a red rhino. There are five rhino species alive today. They are the white rhino, black rhino, Indian rhino, Sumatran rhino, and Javan rhino.
Indian Rhino and one horned Rhino
hiAll rhinos are herbivores. Some eat grass; others eat buds, leaves, and fruit. They all eat a lot! The black rhino and the Indian rhino both have prehensile lips. They can use their lip as a finger to help them pluck or gather food.Most people think that Rhino's kill their food by using their horn, but that is not true, the horn is simply for defense.The Rhinocerous prefers to eat leaves, but will eat grass if that is what is available.
The common name for the Asian Rhino can vary depending on where you are and what type of common name you are referring to. Many of the common names are not used on a regular basis, but for research, or they are just the historical name that has been shortened, or references the region. The Asian Rhino is the "Greater One-Horned Asian Rhino" and they were historically called the "Indian Rhino", also the "Nepalese Rhino", the "Greater Indian Rhino", and Great Indian Rhino. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
Yes. The Indian rhino is fully protected, as are all rhino species.
meat
No
The binomial nomenclature for a rhino is "Rhinoceros" for the genus and the specific species name, such as "Rhinoceros unicornis" for the Indian rhinoceros or "Rhinoceros sondaicus" for the Javan rhinoceros.