Los Angeles Times

A pregnant white rhino stirs hope

Artificial inseminati­on at San Diego Zoo may be key in saving a subspecies of one of world’s iconic animals.

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Artificial inseminati­on at San Diego Zoo may help save a subspecies of one of world’s most iconic creatures.

SAN DIEGO —A southern white rhino has become pregnant through artificial inseminati­on at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park — giving hope for efforts to save a subspecies of one of the world’s most recognizab­le animals, researcher­s announced Thursday.

Scientists will be watching closely to see if the rhino, named Victoria, can carry her calf to term over 16 to 18 months of gestation.

If she does, researcher­s hope someday she could give birth and serve as a surrogate mother to a related northern white rhino, whose population is down to two females after decades of decimation by poachers. The mother and daughter northern white rhinos live in a Kenya wildlife preserve but are not believed to be capable of bearing calves.

News of Victoria’s pregnancy was confirmed two months after the death of the last male northern white rhino, named Sudan, who was also at the Kenya preserve and was euthanized because of ailing health.

Victoria is the first of six female southern white rhinos that the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservati­on Research is testing to determine if they are fit to be surrogate mothers before using the limited sperm and eggs of the northern white rhino that are in storage to impregnate them.

The scientists want to use the frozen sperm and eggs that have been taken from dead northern white rhinos to bring back a herd through artificial inseminati­on, in vitro fertilizat­ion and embryo transfer.

“The confirmati­on of this pregnancy through artificial inseminati­on represents an historic event for our organizati­on but also a critical step in our effort to save the northern white rhino,” said Barbara Durrant, director of reproducti­ve Sciences at the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservati­on Research.

But more challenges lie ahead, with artificial inseminati­on of rhinos in zoos rare so far and resulting in only a few births.

Victoria and the other five female rhinos were relocated to San Diego’s Safari Park in 2015, and scientists will soon start developing artificial inseminati­on techniques and embryo transfer techniques for them in their effort to produce northern white rhino calves.

“We will know that they have proven themselves to be capable of carrying a fetus to term before we would risk putting a precious northern white rhino embryo into one of these southern white rhinos as a surrogate,” Durrant said.

Once that happens, there will be more work to develop techniques that include maturing eggs, fertilizin­g eggs and growing embryos to the stage where they can be transferre­d into the surrogate rhinos. While embryos have been created for southern white rhinos, they haven’t been for northern white rhinos — so there’s no guarantee the process will work.

The San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservati­on Research has the cell lines of 12 northern white rhinos stored in freezing temperatur­es at its “Frozen Zoo.”

The ultimate goal is to create a herd of five to 15 northern white rhinos that would be returned to their natural habitat in Africa. That could take decades.

 ?? Julie Watson Associated Press ?? RESEARCHER­S are hoping that Victoria, a pregnant southern white rhino, will become a surrogate mother to a northern white rhino, a subspecies whose population is down to two females after decades of poaching.
Julie Watson Associated Press RESEARCHER­S are hoping that Victoria, a pregnant southern white rhino, will become a surrogate mother to a northern white rhino, a subspecies whose population is down to two females after decades of poaching.

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