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FLORA AND FAUNA
Critically endangered Sumatran rhino is pregnant, again
By Kerry SHERIDAN
Miami (AFP) Sept 22, 2015


South African breeders ask court to end rhino horn trade ban
Pretoria (AFP) Sept 22, 2015 - Two South African game owners went to court Tuesday to fight the government's ban on the trade in rhino horn, arguing that legalising the market is key to curbing the poaching crisis.

John Hume and Johan Kruger are attempting to overturn South Africa's 2009 moratorium on the domestic trade in rhino horn, a measure put in place to stem burgeoning poaching numbers.

But with the rhino poaching epidemic only getting worse -- 2014 saw a record 1,215 rhino killed for their horn -- breeders say selling legally harvested horns could stifle the lucrative black market trade.

The two game breeders will try to convince the High Court in Pretoria that it is their constitutional right to sell rhino horn, what they describe as a renewable resource.

"A rhino in South Africa since the implementation of the moratorium is worth in money more dead than alive," said Izak du Toit, a lawyer representing Hume, who owns over 1,000 rhino at his farm.

If judges rule in favour of the rhino farmers, it could pave the way for the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) to lift the global ban at a meeting in Johannesburg next year.

South Africa is home to around 20,000 rhino, or 80 percent of the world population.

The number of rhino killed has rocketed from 13 in 2007 to 1,215 last year.

The gentle grey giants are being slaughtered by poachers for their horn, which is used as a traditional medicine in East Asia.

The South African government said it wanted to keep the domestic ban in place.

"It is of the view that, at present, the moratorium constitutes a positive step toward the conservation of rhino," it said in court documents.

Legally dehorning a rhino would see a farm owner put the animal under anaesthesia then saw off the horn, which is composed of keratin, the same material as fingernails.

Each horn would require its own permit that would be recorded in a database.

The case opened on Tuesday and arguments are set to continue through the week, before the judges to make a decision later this year.

A rare Sumatran rhino in Indonesia is pregnant with her second baby and is expected to give birth in May, raising new hope for the critically endangered species, conservationists said Tuesday.

The mother is Ratu, a wild rhino who wandered out of the rainforest and into the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary in Indonesia's Way Kambas National Park 10 years ago.

She got pregnant in January after mating with Andalas, a male rhino at the park, said Susie Ellis, director of the International Rhino Foundation.

Sumatran rhinos have very long pregnancies that last about 16 months, even though they are the smallest of the living rhino species.

"We just wanted to be sure it would take before we made an announcement because in early pregnancy any number of things can go wrong," Ellis told AFP.

Ratu's pregnancy was announced on World Rhino Day, which aims to raise awareness about the five remaining species of rhinos.

Sumatran rhinos are the only Asian rhinoceroses with two horns. They are covered in woolly hair that ranges from reddish brown to black in color.

While Javan rhinos are considered the world's rarest rhinos, Sumatran rhinos are under increasing threat by poachers and continue to lose precious forest habitat.

Only about 100 Sumatran rhinos are believed to exist in the entire world, so the pregnancy is seen as tremendously good news for those trying to save the animals from extinction.

"One more rhino means one percent more animals. That is not a lot but it is certainly an upward trend," Ellis said.

- Conservation efforts -

Wildlife experts and conservationists have been working on a new plan to ramp up efforts to save the Sumatran rhino, after the animals were recently declared extinct in Malaysia.

Experts say the rhinos need more intensive protection from poachers, and isolated animals should be moved into areas where other rhinos live, a complicated and costly endeavor that may involve airlifting the lumbering creatures by helicopter.

Ellis said plans are under way to raise money to expand the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary, built with foundation funds in 1996 and managed in cooperation with the Indonesian government and the Rhino Foundation of Indonesia, "so that the other animals that are found out in the forest that are reproductively viable can be brought there to be part of the managed breeding program."

Births of Sumatran rhinos in captivity are rare. Just four Sumatran rhinos have been born at breeding facilities, including the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary and the Cincinnati Zoo.

Ratu's first baby, Andatu, was born at the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary in 2012, marking "the first Sumatran rhino born in an Asian breeding facility in more than 140 years," said a statement by Siti Urbana Bakar, the Indonesian Minister of Environment and Forestry.

The current pregnancy "represents nearly two decades of international collaboration to save the species," he added.

Andalas, the father of both Andatu and the expected calf, was born at the Cincinnati Zoo. He was moved to Indonesia from the Los Angeles Zoo in 2007.

The only remaining Sumatran rhino in the United States is Harapan, Andalas' younger brother.

He will be moved from the Cincinnati Zoo to Indonesia later this year in an effort to boost the breeding population at the rhino sanctuary, which is currently home to five Sumatran rhinos.


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