Global Times

Scientists grow embryos to save nearly extinct rhino

-

Months after the death of Sudan, the world’s last male northern white rhino, scientists said Wednesday they have grown embryos containing DNA of his kind, hoping to save the subspecies from extinction.

With only two northern white rhino (NWR) known to be alive today – both infertile females – the team hopes their breakthrou­gh technique will lead to the re-establishm­ent of a viable NWR breeding population.

“Our goal is to have in three years the first NWR calf born,” Thomas Hildebrand­t, head of reproducti­on management at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin, told journalist­s of the work.

The team’s work, using a recently-patented, two-meter egg extraction device, resulted in the first-ever test tube-produced rhino embryos.

Now frozen, these “have a very high chance to establish a pregnancy once implanted into a surrogate mother,” said Hildebrand­t.

The hybrid embryos were created with frozen sperm from dead NWR males and the eggs of southern white rhino (SWR) females, of which there are thousands left on Earth.

The eggs were harvested from rhinos in European zoos.

The team now hopes to use the technique to collect eggs from the last two northern white rhinos – Najin and Fatu, the daughter and granddaugh­ter of Sudan. They live in a Kenyan national park.

By fertilizin­g these with northern white rhino sperm and implanting the resulting embryos in surrogate southern white rhino females, the team intends to create a new, fledgling NWR population.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China