Woolly Rhino Horn Reveals New Insights into Biology & Evolution

Jake Buehler 2025-10-07 14:00:00

The⁤ longest woolly rhino ‍horn ever found is providing new insights into the lives of these now extinct animals.

The⁢ horn —‍ found preserved in Siberian‍ permafrost — stretched over 1.6 meters, nearly the⁤ size‍ of a small adult human and a full 30 ⁣centimeters longer than the previous record holder, researchers report September 12 in the Journal of Zoology.

A⁢ local hunter and fisherman found the horn and complete skull‍ along a small tributary‍ of Russia’s Kolyma River. He sent the remains⁢ to the Mammoth Museum in Yakutsk for examination by researchers. frozen ⁢lemmings found near the rhino ⁣remains were sent to Novosibirsk for carbon dating and showed ⁤the remains are about 19,600 ‍years old.

Paleontologist Gennady Boeskorov stands with the‍ longest woolly rhino horn yet ⁤discovered.This species’ compressed,bladelike horns may ⁢have been useful for pushing aside snow during feeding.Gennady Boeskorov

Woolly rhinos ‍(coelodonta antiquitatis)⁣ were related to modern⁣ rhino species, last sharing a common ⁣ancestor with the Sumatran rhino about⁤ 9 million years ago. The⁣ ancient horn is longer than those of any modern rhino species, say Ruslan Belyaev, a ⁢vertebrate zoologist at the A.N. ⁣Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution in⁢ Moscow, and his colleagues.

But the giant horn didn’t belong to a particularly giant individual. The skull bearing the horn was proportionally small for an adult ⁣woolly rhino. The researchers think⁤ it belonged to a female, as among modern rhino species, males are⁢ usually larger‍ than females. Male‍ woolly ⁤rhinos appear to have had thicker horns. But the longest horns may have belonged to females, as is the case in⁤ modern rhinos from Africa. It’s unclear if the ⁣longer horns in female woolly rhinos are due to faster growth or slower wear, Belyaev⁤ says.

The rhino was also quite old when ⁢she died. Rhino horns grow from their base, depositing ⁤layers of‍ keratin that alternate between light and ⁢dark bands in accordance with seasonal fluctuations, similarly to ⁣ tree rings. The team counted these layers and persistent the rhino‍ lived⁤ at least 40 years, the oldest woolly ⁣rhino yet found. This is a few years older than the⁢ maximum age⁢ of modern wild rhinos, and comparable to the ‍oldest⁢ captive rhinos.

“For the first time, we ‍were able to show that in the harsh conditions of the Ice Age, woolly rhinos could live as⁤ long as modern species,” Belyaev says.

Profile drawings of the heads of five different rhino species, living and extinct are in⁣ a line⁣ facing left to compare the sizes⁣ of their horns, which are drawn in dark gray while the skulls are more yellowish.
This ⁢illustration depicts the longest horns for varied extinct and⁣ modern rhino species, in order of longest to shortest. length ⁢is measured along the front curve of the horn, so straighter horns may appear relatively⁢ longer than they truly are. The⁤ dotted lines outline the animals’ smaller⁢ secondary horns (theoretical in the case of the woolly rhino). From left to right: Woolly rhinoceros, ⁢white rhinoceros, black⁣ rhinoceros, Sumatran rhinoceros, greater one-horned rhinoceros.G.G. Boeskorov et al./Journal of Zoology 2025This illustration depicts the longest horns for varied extinct and modern rhino species, in order of longest to shortest.⁢ Length is⁣ measured along the front curve of the horn, so straighter horns may appear⁣ relatively longer than they truly are. ⁣The⁤ dotted lines outline the animals’ smaller secondary horns (theoretical in the case of the woolly rhino). From left to right: Woolly rhinoceros, white rhinoceros, black ⁣rhinoceros, Sumatran rhinoceros, greater one-horned rhinoceros.G.G. Boeskorov et al./Journal of Zoology 2025

The length of the horn may have been particularly critically ⁢important ‍for woolly⁢ rhinos’ survival.Unlike modern ⁣rhinos, they’re⁢ thought to have used the⁣ unusually flattened, saberlike horn to brush‍ away snow when feeding. Wear on the front of⁢ the woolly rhinos’ horns examined in the study extended nearly‍ half the⁣ breadth of the base, says Gennady Boeskorov, a paleontologist at the Diamond ⁤and Precious Metals Geology Institute in Yakutsk.

Luca Pandolfi, a paleontologist at the University‍ of Pisa in Italy ‍not involved with this research, wonders⁤ if woolly rhino horns could provide⁢ any insights to ancient climate changes. It would ⁣be interesting to⁣ know, he says, ‍if climate could influence horn characteristics, ‍and if colder winters⁣ left ⁢behind detectable signals⁢ in the horns’ ⁣growth banding.

Leave a Comment