The Independent on Saturday

Return to the wild for farm rhinos

- JASON GILCHRIST THE CONVERSATI­ON Gilchrist is a lecturer in the School of Applied Sciences at Edinburgh Napier University.

WITH all the terrible news on climate change, it’s easy to lose track of what’s happening with particular species. So, in case you missed it, a new report has bad news for Earth’s five surviving species of rhino.

Poaching for rhino horn continues to threaten population­s of rhino in Africa, and the two smallest and most endangered species of rhino – the Sumatran and the Javan rhino – tread closer to being unable to sustain themselves in the wild, due to habitat loss and low population sizes.

While we should never become desensitis­ed to wildlife crime, environmen­tal destructio­n and species extinction­s, there is also some remarkable news. Conservati­on charity African Parks recently bought the largest private collection of rhino in the world: the Platinum Rhino farm at Klerksdorp in the North West, previously owned by South African businessma­n John Hume.

African Parks plans to release the total Platinum Rhino ranch population 2 000 rhino (amounting to roughly 15% of the global white rhino population), into the wild across Africa over the next 10 years.

That is good news. As an ecologist, I don’t see the point in conserving a wild species to keep in captivity. Wildlife belongs in the wild.

Hume’s plan to buy up and breed farmed rhino might have allowed him to sell horns for a profit once legal internatio­nal trade was permitted. But that didn’t happen.

The internatio­nal ban on trading rhino horn, enacted by the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species, has held firm, despite lobbying by Hume and others. These critics were joined by some conservati­onists who believed the best or only way to save rhino was by legalising the trade in their horns. The logic was that legalisati­on would flood the market with legal rhino horn, devaluing illegal horns and slashing the profits of poachers and wildlife trafficker­s. With that, the incentive to kill rhino would shrink.

Hume continued to expand his private rhino farm and used his increasing rhino population as leverage in his calls for legalisati­on. But with the ban on internatio­nal trade intact, Hume seemed to have run out of patience. The Platinum Rhino collection was put up for online auction in April this year at a starting price of $10 million (about R191m). It failed to attract bids.

That may reflect the problem that rhino faced: if people can’t make money out of rhino, nobody would

want to pay to look after them. But it also highlighte­d a problem driven by farming wildlife for profit, otherwise known as game ranching: if the profits fell, what happened to the animals?

After its failure to sell at auction, the largest private collection of rhino in the world was bought by African Parks. But the charity’s plan to rewild these rhino will not be easy.

A number of years ago I was involved in what was, at the time, the largest private translocat­ion of rhino. The team I worked with moved tens of rhino; the African Parks mission is a lot bigger.

African Parks manages an area of 20 million hectares spread across 22 national parks and protected areas over 12 countries. They will contain suitable savanna grassland for releasing the rhino and the charity has already reintroduc­ed rhino to parks in Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Malawi.

Conservati­on scientists recently said there was “a clear need to scale up rewilding initiative­s”. It doesn’t get much bigger than reintroduc­ing thousands of rhino across Africa. Rhino can play a key role in restoring the ecosystems into which they are placed, greatly influencin­g a network of species around them and healing ecological wounds incurred via people.

This is the nature of rewilding: restoring the linkages that make up ecosystems. Restored megafauna (large herbivorou­s mammals, in this case) can also help address climate change by enhancing how much habitats naturally store carbon, through dispersing seeds and enriching the soil.

Restoring megafauna is tricky, and in a recent scientific paper conservati­onists argued for changes in policy to support it. They suggest “a transition from farming to wildlife ranching, combined with ambitious breeding programmes for keystone megafauna”. The Platinum Rhino population may well turn out to be a flagship in showing that such an approach is achievable.

Where will the rhino go? Will they be released into areas where rhino are locally extinct, or supplement existing population­s? Can they be used to fulfil the role vacated by the functional­ly extinct northern white rhino (subspecies)?

Time will tell. In the meantime, the farmed rhino need to be prepared to cope with the stress of translocat­ion and release, and for a wild life. They need to be toughened, to find and process food from the natural environmen­ts in which they will be placed. They will need to tolerate the challenges of their new environmen­ts, such as disease, parasites and predators.

The most dangerous predator of rhino remains the human species. The conundrum of how to stop or even simply reduce the loss of free-living rhino to poachers remains.

The soon-to-be-released rhino will have to deal with this – with traditiona­l anti-poaching conservati­on support. Alongside that, demand reduction efforts must continue to bring down the desire for rhino horn. |

 ?? | HENK KRUGER African News Agency (ANA) ?? A WHITE rhino mother and calf.
| HENK KRUGER African News Agency (ANA) A WHITE rhino mother and calf.

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