Rhinos
What is trophy hunting?
A form of hunting selected animals where the hunter
keeps a part of the animal, usually the head or the skin.

Status
Population: Around 30,000 (end of 2015)
Range: Grasslands and open savannas
Risk Status: Critically Endangered
Trophy Hunting Arguments
In favor of trophy hunting:
The rhinos that are hunted are usually old and aggressive
rhinos that kill not only males, but also females and calves in fights.
Funds raised from selling hunting permits go back into rhino conservation (permits can go up to $350,000).
The countries that allow rhino hunting permits have the largest rhino populations (Namibia and South Africa). South Africa has 93% of the worlds white rhino population.
Against trophy hunting:
Doesn't make sense financially. 70% of people would pay to view animals on a safari, while only 7% of people would pay to hunt them.
Hunters are not like natural predators. They target the largest rhinos, the ones with the biggest horns, which leads to the "survival of the weak" where the biggest and strongest rhinos are constantly kills only leaving the weak ones to reproduce.
While hunters pay upwards of $200M a year to hunt game, only about 3% of that goes towards local communities and even less goes to conservation.
Trophy hunting only makes up as little as 1.8% of tourism revenue, while nonlethal tourism brings in many more tourists and much more money.