Rhinos are gray and not purple because a lot of light is being absorbed by the skin, and only some is being reflected back towards our eyes, making the rhino look gray. It also has to do with skin pigmentation. It is just the type of pigmentation found in all rhinos. Rhinos could be purple if their skin pigmentation changed to be that way, but it didn't, so rhinos are gray.
white,black,and gray.
same as gray
Black rhinos live in southern and Eastern Africa. White rhinos also live in eastern and Southern Africa. Hence, their ranges mostly coexist.
The most southern country where rhinos live is South Africa. The nation boasts a population of over 16,000 white rhinos. That outnumbers all the rhinos in other countries combined.
Adult rhinos are too big to be troubled by any predators, and Young rhinos are protected by their mothers. Besides, their mud gray natural color lets them blend in quite well anyhow.
They are supposedly real, they are pretty much white rhinos, and white rhinos are real, but endangered. :(
They are mainly gray.
If you mean are white rhinos "dangerous" then yes they are
All rhinos are basically gray, in whatever nuance the locally available mud will give them. They are all grey in colour; White Rhino's are a lighter shade of grey; while Black Rhinos are a darker grey.
There are about 3,000 white rhinos left in the world
Yes, some varieties of rhino live in tropical rainforests. The black and white rhinos live on the savanna in Africa. The Sumatran, Indian, and Javan rhinos all live in the tropical rainforests of southern Asia. The Javan and Sumatran are critically endangered.
blue and gray