Orlando Sentinel

White rhino subspecies dying out

But scientists create hope, used in vitro fertilizat­ion for viable rhino embryos

- By Ben Guarino

A 28-year-old rhinoceros named Najin and her daughter, Fatu, are the only northern white rhinos on the planet. They live at Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y in Kenya under constant armed guard. Both animals are infertile.

In March, veterinari­ans euthanized Sudan, Najin’s father and the last male rhino of their kind. Once Najin and Fatu die, so goes their subspecies.

But genes from the northern white rhinos might live on. There’s a hopeful thread in a new study, published last week in the journal Nature Communicat­ions: For the first time, scientists have used in vitro fertilizat­ion to create viable rhino embryos.

An internatio­nal team of zoologists, veterinari­ans and other researcher­s plucked unfertiliz­ed eggs from southern white rhinoceros­es, a closely related subspecies with a population of about 20,000. In a dish, the scientists used northern white rhinoceros sperm to fertilize the southern white rhinoceros eggs, producing hybrid embryos.

Two hybrid embryos have been frozen for future implantati­on, the researcher­s said. They predict, after developing the proper technique, it will be possible to transfer the embryos to female southern white rhinoceros­es in the coming years. A hybrid calf ensures some genetic continuity for the northern white rhino even after its extinction.

“This is a very ambitious, very brave last-ditch effort to save some of the genetics of a spectacula­r animal,” said conservati­on biologist Stuart Pimm of Duke University, who studies extinction­s and was not involved in this project.

Northern white rhinoceros­es are not evolutiona­ry failures. The rhinos failed, as biologist and study author Thomas B. Hildebrand­t told reporters last week, because their hides were not bulletproo­f. They failed because rhino horns, gram for gram, are more valuable than gold — fetching high prices as status symbols or for their medicinal powders.

Hildebrand­t, a professor at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin, and his colleagues are part of a project that has been stockpilin­g northern white rhinoceros genetic material for decades. Oliver Ryder, a conservati­on geneticist at the San Diego Zoo, collected skin samples from Sudan in 1986 as part of a rhino cell bank.

Scientists began to freeze northern white rhinoceros sperm in 2008, Hildebrand­t said, storing 300 milliliter­s’ worth, the volume of a soda can. But scooping up rhino skin and semen is relatively easy, at least compared with removing eggs from within a two-ton wild animal.

“This is quite the technologi­cal feat,” said David Wildt, senior scientist at the Smithsonia­n Conservati­on Biology Institute. He was not involved in the research.

The study’s authors used a 60-inch-long instrument (patent pending) to insert a needle through the anus of anesthetiz­ed southern white rhinos and into ovarian tissue. An ultrasound monitor provided the guidance for the egg collectors.

Veterinari­ans have used in vitro fertilizat­ion in horses, cattle and other livestock, but never something as large as a white rhino.

Yet such techniques are the “only way” to save northern white rhino genes, said biologist Terri Roth, director of the Center for Conservati­on and Research of Endangered Wildlife at the Cincinnati Zoo. These genes might benefit the southern white rhinos that move into their relatives’ former habitats, or confer advantages to living rhinos during disease outbreaks. The odds are against a complete revival of the northern white rhino, according to Roth, who oversaw the first successful breeding of a captive Sumatran rhino in 2001.

“Even if the moon and the stars all aligned,” and a surrogate rhinoceros gave birth to a hybrid calf, “that still hasn’t brought back the subspecies.”

 ?? TONY KARUMBA/GETTY-AFP ?? Najin, left, and Fatu are the last northern white rhinos, and both are infertile. But there is still hope for the subspecies.
TONY KARUMBA/GETTY-AFP Najin, left, and Fatu are the last northern white rhinos, and both are infertile. But there is still hope for the subspecies.

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