Mail & Guardian

‘Trade not aid will save the rhino’

Proposal to inject radioactiv­e material into horns to halt poaching rejected by conservati­onists

- Emmanuel Koro

University of Witwatersr­and Professor James Larkin offers no apologies that his proposed experiment to inject live rhinos’ horns with radioactiv­e materials to discourage poaching may destroy the legal rhino horn trade, including rhino ranchers’ businesses.

Concerned conservati­onists say this experiment is an example of using extreme solutions instead of simple and practical ones to manage problems.

On the one hand, rhino poaching has been kept in reasonable check by diligent guards and strong fencing. On the other hand, exposure to radioactiv­ity can cause nausea, vomiting, hair loss, diarrhoea, central nervous system damage and death. It can also cause DNA damage and raises the risk of cancer, particular­ly in young children and foetuses.

However, Larkin, director of the radiation and health physics unit at Wits, said that his Rhisotope project aims to inject rhino horns with small quantities of radioactiv­e material that he believes will be “harmless”.

“Putting radioactiv­e material into the rhino horn is the idea of the [Rhisotope] project to devalue the horn and make people uninterest­ed in it,” said Larkin.

Looking into Larkin’s idea

Godfrey Harris, the managing director of the Los Angeles-based Ivory Education Institute, said Larkin “has no mandate or the ability to force anybody to accept any element of this nutty scheme”.

Larkin concurs with this part of Harris’ opinion. “It’s entirely the decision of the owners of the rhino.

It’s entirely up to them not to accept [my proposal] but they must face the consequenc­es of rhino poaching if they don’t accept it.”

Contradict­ing this point of view, Harris said: “The rhino ranchers have built large, growing and vibrant white rhino herds despite the rhino poaching threats.”

However, Larkin noted that the likes of South Africa-based white rhino producer John Hume “created a catastroph­ic business model” by raising a large herd whose horns they might never trade.

The chairman of South Africa’s Private Rhino Owners Associatio­n (PROA), Pelham Jones, was strongly opposed to the idea.

“We are deeply concerned that the project, while well intended, is in conflict with our rights as owners to sustainabl­e utilisatio­n [of our herds] as is entrenched in the Constituti­on,” he said.

Jones added: “Trade in rhino horn will generate much-needed conservati­on revenue which, in the long term, will assist local communitie­s with job creation and transforma­tion.

“The Rhisotope project is in total conflict with this proposal as the horns will lose all commercial value.”

Problems with trade

Reacting to Larkin’s proposed experiment, the chief executive of South Africa-based True Green Alliance Ron Thomson said: “I am absolutely aghast at the lack of perspicaci­ty on the part of Larkin’s understand­ing about the wildlife management needs in Africa today. His idea panders to the animal rights ideology which is dominated by one word ‘prohibitio­n’. He wants to stop the trade. We want to legalise trade.”

Larkin was quoted in the media as saying that the Rhisotope project is receiving “overwhelmi­ng support”. Yet he declined to disclose the names of organisati­ons and government­s supporting him. Harris noted that if Larkin had the support that he claims, he would identify any agency “other than himself who believes this is a viable scheme”.

In a similar vein, Jones added: “We have seen a similar concept to infuse rhino horn with poison. But research showed that it is not possible. This action did not prevent poachers from killing rhinos that had been marked as having been treated with poison.”

Going ahead

Despite the criticism, Larkin claims to be proceeding with Rhisotope.

“We are at the early stages of discussion with many stakeholde­rs,” said Larkin. “[Support for the Rhisotope project] is coming from all sorts of different places.”

One of Zimbabwe’s top conservati­onists and former director general of Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, Morris Mtsambiwa, said that he would not welcome the project in Zimbabwe.

“I think one day Zimbabwe should be able to trade in its rhino horn and therefore injecting radioactiv­e material [into them] is not good.

“I would not encourage Zimbabwe to support such a proposal. It sounds dangerous. Trade in rhino horn has to take place sustainabl­y if we are to benefit from rhino conservati­on, otherwise there would be no incentive to conserve rhinos.”

Less invasive ways

Concerned conservati­onists have said that a rhino’s horn is a renewable resource that regrows, very much like fingernail­s, and is harvestabl­e every two years or so, without needing to kill the rhino. The horn can be trimmed with no pain or harm to the animal. It is widely feared, however, that the Rhisotope initiative could destroy the potential to ever trade and benefit from rhino horn for conservati­on and developmen­t purposes in Africa.

Larkin has seemingly placed himself firmly in the anti-rhino trade movement. With the internatio­nal ban on the rhino-horn trade failing to stop poaching, conservati­onists have reacted by saying that in Africa if people don’t benefit from wildlife they would not see the need to conserve it. Therefore, they argue that trade, not aid, will save the rhino.

“Injecting radioactiv­e material into our rhinos would make the rhino, as a species, inimical,” said Thomson. “It will negate the use of legal trade [to] ‘save’ our rhinos by [lessening] the species’ value to mankind.”

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 ?? Photos: Conrad Bornman/ Rapport/gallo Images and Waldo Swiegers/bloomberg/ Getty Images ?? Conservati­on: Professor James Larkin (left) says injecting radioactiv­e material into rhino horns may stop poaching. John Hume (left), a white rhino farmer, on his ranch outside Johannesbu­rg.
Photos: Conrad Bornman/ Rapport/gallo Images and Waldo Swiegers/bloomberg/ Getty Images Conservati­on: Professor James Larkin (left) says injecting radioactiv­e material into rhino horns may stop poaching. John Hume (left), a white rhino farmer, on his ranch outside Johannesbu­rg.

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