The Japan Times - 'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

EUR -
AED 4.238556
AFN 72.7108
ALL 96.082026
AMD 435.639205
ANG 2.065997
AOA 1058.341098
ARS 1611.474574
AUD 1.62305
AWG 2.077442
AZN 1.963632
BAM 1.955918
BBD 2.31787
BDT 141.20853
BGN 1.972773
BHD 0.435694
BIF 3416.932404
BMD 1.154135
BND 1.470557
BOB 7.968499
BRL 5.995037
BSD 1.150835
BTN 106.274197
BWP 15.639471
BYN 3.451804
BYR 22621.040548
BZD 2.31447
CAD 1.580039
CDF 2614.114822
CHF 0.90569
CLF 0.026523
CLP 1047.273231
CNY 7.948352
CNH 7.943419
COP 4271.614184
CRC 539.416228
CUC 1.154135
CUP 30.58457
CVE 112.12455
CZK 24.430957
DJF 204.926165
DKK 7.472578
DOP 70.242113
DZD 152.435303
EGP 60.293726
ERN 17.312021
ETB 181.199444
FJD 2.548387
FKP 0.867712
GBP 0.863752
GEL 3.127505
GGP 0.867712
GHS 12.562759
GIP 0.867712
GMD 84.823045
GNF 10085.390801
GTQ 8.833022
GYD 241.259546
HKD 9.044873
HNL 30.665647
HRK 7.534209
HTG 150.955849
HUF 388.755308
IDR 19579.029955
ILS 3.577183
IMP 0.867712
INR 106.631949
IQD 1511.916486
IRR 1516533.02462
ISK 143.597326
JEP 0.867712
JMD 181.035446
JOD 0.818281
JPY 183.34598
KES 149.517795
KGS 100.928472
KHR 4618.158943
KMF 492.815153
KPW 1038.771922
KRW 1714.698012
KWD 0.353939
KYD 0.959025
KZT 554.50428
LAK 24695.742965
LBP 103230.386068
LKR 358.370781
LRD 210.596336
LSL 19.262967
LTL 3.40786
LVL 0.698125
LYD 7.380713
MAD 10.807029
MDL 20.075604
MGA 4806.971373
MKD 61.658341
MMK 2423.859761
MNT 4125.451781
MOP 9.288979
MRU 46.286555
MUR 53.805255
MVR 17.831543
MWK 2004.732168
MXN 20.373478
MYR 4.52077
MZN 73.760321
NAD 19.262575
NGN 1561.405647
NIO 42.379283
NOK 11.063172
NPR 170.039116
NZD 1.969052
OMR 0.44376
PAB 1.153188
PEN 3.94426
PGK 4.963644
PHP 69.028664
PKR 322.29194
PLN 4.26136
PYG 7460.224439
QAR 4.205087
RON 5.093888
RSD 117.41474
RUB 95.070643
RWF 1683.882559
SAR 4.333138
SBD 9.285224
SCR 16.472922
SDG 693.635342
SEK 10.706002
SGD 1.472688
SHP 0.8659
SLE 28.391892
SLL 24201.640544
SOS 656.519751
SRD 43.42429
STD 23888.258553
STN 24.497553
SVC 10.069259
SYP 127.96572
SZL 19.262124
THB 37.301872
TJS 11.030575
TMT 4.051013
TND 3.384495
TOP 2.778879
TRY 51.033419
TTD 7.808201
TWD 36.781758
TZS 3010.825447
UAH 50.563121
UGX 4352.843167
USD 1.154135
UYU 46.875638
UZS 14008.314214
VES 516.830947
VND 30353.743184
VUV 138.019678
WST 3.178729
XAF 655.976735
XAG 0.014505
XAU 0.00023
XCD 3.119107
XCG 2.074053
XDR 0.815825
XOF 658.432219
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.31915
ZAR 19.247972
ZMK 10388.594502
ZMW 22.446675
ZWL 371.63091
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.75

    +1.02%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    90.42

    -0.52%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    26.01

    +0.42%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    72.92

    +1.65%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    34.29

    -0.52%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    60.55

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    89.8

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    22.88

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.5

    +2.3%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    -0.3600

    53.41

    -0.67%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.46

    -0.64%

  • BP

    0.9500

    43.85

    +2.17%

  • AZN

    -0.7200

    191.29

    -0.38%

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino
'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino / Photo: SIMON MAINA - AFP

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

Two rhinos munch serenely on grass as the sun rises over Mount Kenya, oblivious to the massive global endeavour to prevent them being the last of their kind.

Text size:

Najin and her daughter Fatu are the only northern white rhinos left on Earth. The clock is ticking before they become the latest in a long line of animals that humans have poached to extinction.

But a recent breakthrough means this could be the year the world celebrates a new northern white rhino foetus.

It would be an unprecedented comeback for the subspecies, declared functionally extinct after the death of the last male, Sudan, in 2018.

Uterus problems mean neither Sudan's daughter Najin nor his granddaughter Fatu can carry a pregnancy to term.

But Fatu still produces viable eggs, making her a candidate for in-vitro fertilisation (IVF).

For years, scientists have been collecting her eggs at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, where the rhinos remain under 24-hour guard. The eggs are sent to Europe where they are fertilised in a lab with sperm from dead male northern whites.

There are now 36 fertilised eggs -- or embryos -- ready to be implanted, said Jan Stejskal, project coordinator for BioRescue, the most prominent of numerous such initiatives worldwide.

It is thought Fatu can produce around 10 more eggs before she is too old.

"We hope to achieve the first successful pregnancy with the northern rhino embryo this year," said Stejskal.

"But I cannot promise it."

- 'Mixed with sadness' -

The plan is to use a female southern white rhino -- a closely related subspecies -- as a surrogate.

A year ago scientists announced a breakthrough: a surrogate was pregnant with a male southern white foetus, the first time IVF had worked for rhinos.

But like so much about this long and difficult process, the joy was "mixed with sadness", Ol Pejeta head of research Samuel Mutisya told AFP.

By the time the 6.4-centimetre, 70-day-old foetus was discovered, the surrogate had already died from an unrelated bacteria infection.

Worse still, a sterilised male who had played the role of "teaser bull" -- to help identify when the female is ready for impregnation -- also died from the infection, and finding a replacement has proved tricky.

The team is determined to try again, this time with a northern white embryo.

- So how many chances? -

There are other avenues, including a Japanese effort using stem cells to create northern white rhino eggs and sperm.

This could dramatically boost the number of embryos, and create a wider gene pool for future inseminations.

The stem cell efforts are roughly halfway there, Stejskal said, estimating they could produce embryos in around four years.

Meanwhile, another initiative at Oxford University is attempting to use ovary tissue from dead rhinos to create eggs.

It could mean that even after Najin, 35, and Fatu, 24, have died, scientists could retrieve immature eggs from their ovaries.

Suzannah Williams, a researcher leading the effort, said her "best guess" was they could retrieve a few hundred eggs, even if not all would be viable.

But scientists hope for a solution while Najin and Fatu are still alive to teach the future baby how to be a northern white rhino.

- 'When not if' -

No one knows how likely it is that an individual IVF attempt will result in pregnancy.

It took three attempts for the southern white surrogate, but that is a tiny sample size.

Plenty else could go wrong during a rhino pregnancy, which lasts up to 18 months.

Stejskal remains optimistic, insisting: "We will save them," while Williams agreed it was a matter of "when, not if".

Others are unconvinced.

Even if babies were born from the embryos, the genetic diversity would still be "too low" to revive the species, Save the Rhino International CEO Jo Shaw told AFP.

It is likely too late for northern rhinos, she said, and the focus should be on the Javan and Sumatran subspecies, which each have fewer than 50 surviving.

The northern white researchers maintain the techniques they are developing will help all rhinos, as well as other species.

BioRescue's work is already contributing to saving the Sumatran rhino, Stejskal said.

Back in the Ol Pejeta enclosure, Najin and Fatu's main handler Zacharia Mutai argued it was humans who poached northern whites to the edge of extinction, so it is our responsibility to bring them back.

Mutai, who was there when Sudan died, said the birth of a new baby would be a cause for "world celebration".

"And I will be looking after the baby," he said with a smile, as Fatu and Najin kept on munching behind him.

K.Nakajima--JT