The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Four black rhinos die after Chad conservati­on effort

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LIBREVILLE: Four out of six South African rhinos that were transferre­d to a park in southeast Chad in a bid to revive the endangered species have died, but not from poaching, conservati­onists say.

“An additional two black rhino carcasses have been discovered in Zakouma National Park in Chad, bringing the total mortalitie­s to four, of the six that were reintroduc­ed in May this year,” the conservati­on group African Parks said in a press release.

“We can confirm that none of these rhinos were poached.”

Six rhinos were introduced to Zakouma National Park under a joint initiative combining Chad, South Africa and the NGO, which successful­ly operates a number of wildlife parks in Africa.

They were put on a 4,800kilomet­re flight from South Africa, accompanie­d by a team of vets.

Two were found dead last month.

Post-mortems and tests on blood, tissue and faeces have been sent to a lab in South Africa, African Parks said in the press release, which was issued on Friday.

So far, there is no evidence of infectious disease or plant toxicity as a cause of death, it said.

Blood samples showed exposure to trypanosom­es — a parasite transmitte­d by tsetse flies — but this is not suspected to be the cause of the tragedy, it said.

“Low fat reserves suggest that maladaptat­ion by the rhinos to their new environmen­t is the likely underlying cause, although tests to be undertaken on brain and spinal fluid may shed additional light on the exact cause of deaths,” it added.

There are fewer than 25,000 rhinos left in the wild in Africa due to a surge in poaching, and only 5,000 of them are black rhinos.

The species is rated as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN).

Northern white rhinos disappeare­d from Chad several decades ago and the last western black rhino was recorded there in 1972, after decades of poaching pushed both subspecies to local extinction.

In July, outrage and a bitter row over responsibi­lity flared when 11 black rhinos in Kenya died after being transferre­d to a new sanctuary, mainly due to toxic levels of salt in borehole drinking water.

 ??  ?? File photo shows a black rhino running around in a holding pen in Zakouma National Park in Chad. — AFP photo
File photo shows a black rhino running around in a holding pen in Zakouma National Park in Chad. — AFP photo

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