Kuwait Times

Nepal to relocate five rare one-horned rhinos

-

Conservati­onists yesterday captured a rare one-horned rhinoceros in Nepal as part of an attempt to increase the number of the vulnerable animals, which are prized by wildlife poachers. Five rhinos—one male and four female—will be released into a national park in Nepal’s far west over the coming week in the hope of establishi­ng a new breeding group. The first, a large male estimated to be around 12 years old, was located by rangers in Chitwan National Park after a four-hour search on elephant-back.

“He is one of the dominant males in this area,” said park chief Ram Chandra Kandel. The team of vets, wildlife experts and mahouts hope to capture a second rhino later yesterday before departing for Shuklaphan­ta National Park, a 12-hour drive away. It will take at least a week to capture and transport the remaining rhinos to their new habitat, which is already home to an estimated eight of their kin. The first group of rhinos was released into Shuklaphan­ta in 2000, Dr Kanchan Thapa, a biologist from conservati­on group WWF, said.

The latest rhinos are needed to replenish the population, he added. Thousands of one-horned rhinos once roamed the southern plains of Nepal but rampant poaching and pressures of human encroachme­nt reduced their numbers to around 100 in the later part of last century. There are now around 645 after a government-led conservati­on push in the years since a 10-year civil war ended in 2006. Poaching has declined significan­tly in Nepal, with only a few cases in recent years.

A rhino died last year after being shot by poachers, who were intercepte­d by authoritie­s before removing its valuable horn. Rhino horns can sell for tens of thousands of dollars on the internatio­nal black market, where they are used in traditiona­l medicines in China and Southeast Asia. Rhino poaching carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in jail and a 100,000-rupee ($1,000) fine in Nepal. The other significan­t population of one-horned rhinos is in the Kaziranga National Park in northeaste­rn India, where there are believed to be around 1,200.—AFP

 ??  ?? KATHMANDU: A Nepalese vet and technical team collar collect samples from a darted rhino in Chitwan National Park, some 250kms south of Kathmandu yesterday.
KATHMANDU: A Nepalese vet and technical team collar collect samples from a darted rhino in Chitwan National Park, some 250kms south of Kathmandu yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait