A RARE greater one-horned rhino calf has been born at Chester Zoo.

The male calf arrived to 11-year-old mum Asha following a 16-month gestation and 20-minute labour which was captured live on CCTV.

Now the zoo has released the footage which shows the unnamed youngster getting to its feet to take its first wobbly steps before feeding for the first time shortly after.

Tim Rowlands, curator of mammals, said: “Asha is a superb mum and delivered her little bundle of joy in very relaxed fashion – almost lying down completely to give birth.

“Greater one-horned rhinos are a vulnerable species and every new calf is ever so special.

"This is a momentous new arrival.

“Rhinos around the world are under increasing pressure due largely to the senseless poaching of their horn.

"We need more people to be aware of their plight and join us in the fight to end the slaughter and ensure these magnificent animals are around for the future.

"Asha’s precious new arrival, which is already developing into quite a bolshie little character, will hopefully go some way to keeping rhinos and the surrounding issues in the spotlight.”

Zoo conservationists have hailed the birth as a big boost to the endangered species breeding programme, with the greater one horned rhino listed as vulnerable to extinction by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The animals are threatened in the wild by the illegal poaching of their horns and habitat loss.

Chester Zoo is part of a breeding programme coordinated by the European Association of Zoos and Aquariums (EAZA) that is focused on sustaining the greater one-horned rhino population.

Collections director Mike Jordan told the Globe: “At one stage, the greater one-horn rhino was hunted almost to extinction and there were less than 200 in the wild. Thankfully, steps to protect them were taken just in time and today there are around 3,500 in India and Nepal.

“That number though is still desperately small and they continue to face threats to their long-term survival.

"As with the rhinos in Africa, they are targeted for their horns by poachers and much of the land where they once lived has been taken over by humans.

"It’s therefore vitally important that we act for wildlife to ensure the population doesn’t dip to critically low levels again.”