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Miano says efforts to bring back white rhino from extinction on track
Alvin Mwangi
Tourism and Wildlife Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Miano. PHOTO/Print
Tourism and Wildlife Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Miano. PHOTO/Print

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Tourism and Wildlife Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Miano yesterday announced that efforts to bring back the northern white rhino from extinction are on course and are at an advanced stage.

Miano who spoke in Samburu during World Rhino Day Celebrations said Kenyan scientists and their counterparts from other areas globally are an inch closer to saving the Northern white rhino species from extinction through in-vitro fertilisation (IVF), with only two remaining at Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Laikipia County.

“Wildlife Research and Training Institute (WRTI)— together with other researchers around the world are working  to bring the northern white rhino back from extinction.

This daring and truly commendable act akin to reversing fate hopes to produce northern white rhino embryos from genetic material and eventually implanting them in southern white rhino females to produce calves. Success in this pathbreaking venture will yield hope to the conservation fraternity and put Kenya at the forecourt of wildlife guardianship globally,” she said.

Rare species

Efforts to recover the rare species began a few years ago with The BioRescue team who have been racing against time, harvesting about 29 oocytes, which were flown to a lab in Cremona, Italy, for maturing and as they wait for the right time to implant them into the viable Southern White rhino.

Scientists observe that the oocytes, after the maturity period, will be fused with sperm, which were harvested from Sudan, the Northern male white rhino that died in 2018 due to poor health, aimed at ensuring they save the colossal species.

 Kenya has only two remaining white rhinos living at Ol-Pajeta conservancy in Laikipia county.

By the year 2008, the number of Northern Whites had been wiped out to eight. The famous Four, consisting of two males, namely Sudan and Suni, and two females, Najin and Fatu, were transferred to Dvůr Králové Zoo in the Czech Republic; however, efforts to breed the species naturally were rendered futile due to unfavorable living conditions in the zoo.

With poaching emerging as the biggest challenge Miano observed that the government has stepped up it’s efforts saying they have adopted novel technologies such as the use of drones and forensic evidence.  “We have allocated resources to support the recruitment of additional law enforcement officers. This will  contribute significantly to our efforts to save the remaining rhino  populations and other wildlife for posterity,” she said.

At the same time Miano said that the government was leading in as far as statistics of black rhino are concerned.

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