Black rhinos are solitary, with only mothers and their calves bonding. Rhinos share home ranges.
It eats a wide variety of vegetation, including leaves, buds, and shoots of plants, bushes, and trees,
Females reproduce every 2.5–5 years after a 15–16-month gestation. Their solitary calf lives alone at three years old.
Rhinos' poor eyesight may explain their random charges. Their hearing and smell are excellent.
Black rhinos are 3.5–3.9 m (11–13 ft) long, 1.50–1.75 m (59–69 in) tall at the shoulder, and weigh 850–1,600 kg.
Males weigh 1,800 kg, females 1,600 kg. Keratin horns on the skulls of men and females are 50 cm long
Black rhinos are substantially smaller than white rhinos.