Key Points

The Kenya Wildlife Service is employing cutting-edge reproductive technologies to prevent the total extinction of northern white rhinos. With only two females remaining, scientists are using in-vitro fertilization and embryo transfer techniques to potentially regenerate the subspecies. Collaborative international efforts have already successfully created and preserved pure northern white rhino embryos. This groundbreaking project represents the last scientific hope for saving these critically endangered animals from complete disappearance.

Key Points: Kenya's Last Northern White Rhinos Hope for Survival

  • Advanced reproductive technologies being used to save subspecies
  • Only two female northern white rhinos remain globally
  • Embryos successfully created and cryopreserved
  • International consortium working on breakthrough conservation effort
2 min read

Kenya says efforts to save northern white rhinos from extinction at advanced stage

Groundbreaking reproductive technology offers last chance to save critically endangered northern white rhino subspecies from total extinction

"After years of meticulous research and perfecting our methods, we are now at the critical stage of getting a pregnancy - Erustus Kanga, KWS Director-General"

Nairobi, July 18

The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) said on Friday that its efforts to rescue Northern White Rhinos (NWR), a critically endangered species, from extinction through artificial fertilization are at a crucial stage.

The KWS said it is collaborating with international partners in the BioRescue consortium to utilise advanced Assisted Reproduction Technologies (ART), such as in Vitro Fertilization (IVF) and embryo transfer.

Following the death of the last male of the species in 2018, the BioRescue consortium is now exploring ART using the only two remaining female NWRs, Najin and her daughter Fatu, both hosted at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Central Kenya's Laikipia County, the KWS said in a statement issued in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya, Xinhua news agency reported.

"After years of meticulous research and perfecting our methods, we are now at the critical stage of getting a pregnancy using northern white rhino embryos," KWS Director-General Erustus Kanga said.

According to the statement, the ART process involves harvesting eggs from Najin and Fatu, airlifting the eggs to the Avantea laboratory in Cremona, Italy, within a critical 24-hour window for maturation into ovum, and fertilization of the ovum using cryopreserved sperm from deceased NWR males to form embryos that will later be transferred to surrogate SWRs to establish a pregnancy.

Kanga said they have already achieved a proof of concept by successfully creating a pregnancy in a surrogate using a Southern White Rhino embryo.

The BioRescue project, which is the last hope for the functionally extinct subspecies, has so far successfully created some pure NWR embryos that are safely cryopreserved awaiting future transfer, the KWS said.

The KWS said the journey to save the NRWs began in earnest in 2019, building on decades of conservation efforts, including the 2009 transfer of the last four fertile NWRs from Zoo Dvur Kralove in the Czech Republic to Ol Pejeta Conservancy.

"With the passing of the last two males, Sudan and Suni, hope now rests entirely on science and the two remaining females, Najin and her daughter Fatu," the agency added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I appreciate the scientific effort, I wonder if these resources could be better spent on species that still have viable populations? The cost of IVF for rhinos must be enormous when we have so many conservation needs in India and Africa.
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Arjun K
Amazing work by Kenyan scientists! We need more international cooperation like this. Remember when Project Tiger saved our national animal from extinction? Conservation knows no borders. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Sarah B
The dedication of these conservationists is inspiring! Airlifting eggs to Italy within 24 hours shows such commitment. Hope they succeed - every species matters in maintaining Earth's biodiversity.
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Vikram M
This makes me emotional. We humans drove them to extinction through poaching and habitat destruction. Now spending millions to undo our mistakes. Lesson for India too - protect wildlife before it's too late!
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Kavya N
The science behind this is fascinating! IVF for rhinos - who would have thought? Indian researchers should collaborate on such projects. Our IITs and wildlife institutes have brilliant minds who could contribute.

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