The most endangered animal right now of 2024 is the Javan Rhino. The Javan rhinoceros, Javan rhino, Sunda rhinoceros or lesser one-horned rhinoceros is a critically endangered member of the genus Rhinoceros, of the rhinoceros family, Rhinocerotidae, and one of the five remaining extant rhinoceros species across South Asia and Africa. They are a dusky grey colour and have armoured plated skin. They can weigh around 1,500kg. They have the smallest horn of all rhino species, the average measuring less than 25cm in length. Mainly solitary, they spend most of their time browsing in the forest or submerged in mud wallows. Javan rhinos eat an estimated 50 kilograms of food each day and follow a diet of leaves, shoots, tall grasses, twigs, and fallen fruit. Biologists have identified over 100 different plant species consumed by Javan rhinos, making them the most adaptable feeders of all rhino species. Aside from humans, adults have no predators in their range. The Javan rhino usually avoids humans, but will attack when it feels threatened. Scientists and conservationists rarely study the animals directly due to their extreme rarity and the danger of interfering with such an endangered species. The Javan rhinoceros inhabits forests, marshy areas, and regions of thick bush and bamboo. It is an active climber in mountainous country. Javan rhinoceroses are mainly browsers and often feed on pioneer plants that dominate in gaps in the forest created by fallen trees. This animal is very important and needs to be spared as there are now very few of them left now