Rhinoplax Skull Replica or Helmeted Hornbill Skull Replica measures 8.3 inches. Helmeted Hornbill Skull Replica is museum quality polyurethane cast. 2-part skull (separate cranium and jaw)
The R. vigil or Helmeted hornbill (Rhinoplax vigil) is a very large bird in the hornbill family. The body length is 43 to 47 in., not counting the tail feathers, which boost the length a further 20 in. One male weighed 6.8 lb. in weight while two females averaged about 6.0 lb.
R. vigil or Helmeted hornbill is found on the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Borneo, Thailand and Myanmar.
The casque (helmetlike structure on the head) accounts for some 11% of its 3 kg weight. Unlike any other hornbill, the casque is almost solid, and is used in head-to-head combat among males.
The casque is the source of hornbill ivory, a valuable carving material. Indigenous peoples also use the central tail feathers to decorate dancing cloaks and head-dresses. Historically, the casque was also used by carvers in China and Japan.
After ongoing hunting pressure and habitat loss, the helmeted hornbill was uplisted from near threatened to critically endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 2015.
It is listed in Appendix I of CITES. According to the conservation group TRAFFIC, 2,170 casques were confiscated in just three years in China and Indonesia alone.
There are fewer than 100 birds remaining in Thai forests. At least 546 hornbill parts, mostly casques of helmeted hornbills, have been posted for sale on Thai Facebook in the past five years.
Traders will pay villagers 5,000-6,000 baht (US$165–200) for a hornbill head. Prices double or triple in cities and increase exponentially when sold overseas.
R. vigil or Helmeted hornbill has mostly blackish plumage, except that the belly and legs are white and the tail is white with a black band near the tip of each feather. The tail is long and the two central tail feathers are much longer than the others, giving the bird a total length greater than that of any other hornbill species.
This species has a bare, wrinkled throat patch, pale blue to greenish in females and red in males.
The casque goes from the base of the bill halfway to the tip, where it ends abruptly. It and the bill are yellow; the red secretion of the preen gland covers the sides and top of the casque and the base of the bill, but often leaves the front end of the casque and the distal half of the bill yellow.
Their call is two parts, the first consisting of a series of loud, intermittent barbet-like hoots, sometimes double-toned and over two dozen in number, which sound like a “toop” or “took” noise.
These hoots gradually accelerates to climax in a cackle reminiscent of laughter; this is thought to advertise information about the caller, such as age, size, and fitness, to listening conspecifics. The calls are audible up to 2-3 km away and can go on for minutes at a time.
R. vigil or Helmeted hornbills mostly eat the fruit of strangler figs.They are thought to be territorial and monogamous, although little is known about their social behavior.
The birds breed once a year, producing a single chick. Mother and chick live inside a sealed tree cavity for the first five months of the chick’s life. Their specialized nesting behavior makes them particularly vulnerable to poaching and deforestation.
Males fight over territory on the wing, ramming each other with their casques. Such encounters are called aerial jousting. Females accompany males during an approach in an aerial joust but veer off in opposite directions during the collision.