The Star Malaysia

Hope for the species

Scientists create hybrids in race to save white rhino.

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BERLIN: Scientists say they’re several steps closer to perfecting a method that could prevent the extinction of northern white rhinos, of which only two animals are known to be still alive.

According to a paper published on Wednesday in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, researcher­s have succeeded in creating embryos using frozen northern white rhino sperm and eggs from a southern white rhino, a closely related sub-species.

It’s the first time such hybrid embryos have been created and the scientists from Germany, Italy and the Czech Republic say it could provide a pathway to saving the critically endangered northern white rhino after the last male, called Sudan, died in March.

They plan to harvest the egg cells of the two surviving female rhinos soon and use preserved sperm to produce “pure” northern white rhino embryos.

Since the females, a mother and daughter called Najin and Fatu, are unable to bear offspring themselves, the embryos would be implanted in a southern white rhino surrogate.

In order to increase the supply of eggs and preserve the northern white rhino’s genetic diversity, scientists are also working on a second method that would coax frozen skin cells from deceased animals into becoming egg cells, a procedure that has already succeeded in mice.

Thomas Hildebrand­t, of the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin, said researcher­s hope the first northern white rhino calf will be born in about three years.

“We are quite confident with the technology we have developed,” he said during a telephone conference with reporters detailing the research.

Saving the northern white rhino has become an internatio­nal effort, with cooperatio­n but also some rivalry among scientists and institutio­ns around the world, including zoos in San Diego and Cincinnati.

Some experts have criticised the effort, however, saying it comes too late.

“I have no doubt that its purely scientific merit is laudable and it might have some applicatio­n to endangered species conservati­on in the future,” said Richard Kock, a conservati­onist at Britain’s Royal Veterinary College who has worked extensivel­y in Africa.

“But I am afraid it is very much Nero fiddling after Rome is burning with respect to (northern) white rhino.”

Kock and fellow conservati­onists warned against focusing only on the northern white rhino sub-species, noting that its southern cousin has come back from the brink of extinction and now numbers some 21,000 individual­s.

Instead, they suggested, work should focus on saving other endangered rhino species that can still be found in the wild.

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