Muscat Daily

Rhino population in Nepal grows in conservati­on boost

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Kathmandu, Nepal - Nepal’s population of endangered onehorned rhinoceros has grown by more than a hundred over the past six years, officials said, with campaigner­s hailing the increase as a conservati­on ‘milestone’.

The population rose to 752 across four national parks in the southern plains, up from 645 in 2015, the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservati­on said Saturday.

“The increase of rhinos is exciting news for us,” the department’s informatio­n officer, Haribhadra Acharya, told AFP on Sunday. “But we have challenges ahead to expand the habitat areas of this animal to maintain the growth.”

Thousands of one-horned rhinos once roamed the southern plains, but rampant poaching and human encroachme­nt on their habitat reduced their numbers to around 100 in Nepal in the 1960s.

Since 1994, the Himalayan nation has conducted a rhino census once every five years, as authoritie­s stepped up their efforts to boost population numbers for the species listed as vulnerable by the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on for Nature.

In the first census in 1994, 466 rhinos were counted.

Some 250 personnel - including enumerator­s, soldiers and veterinari­ans - rode on 57 elephants for nearly three weeks from late March to count the rhinos. The census - delayed for a year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic - was carried out using GPS equipment, binoculars and cameras.

“Rhinos were counted through a direct observatio­n method, where the counting team reached as close as 100m from the wild animal,” Acharya added.

During the census, an elephant mahout was attacked and killed by a tiger, authoritie­s said. Another official was injured when a wild elephant attacked the team.

Global conservati­on group the World Wildlife Fund - which provides financial and technical assistance for the census - called the population increase a ‘milestone’ for Nepal.

“The overall growth in population size is indicative of ongoing protection and habitat management efforts by protected area authoritie­s despite challengin­g contexts these past years,” the WWF’s Nepal representa­tive, Ghana Gurung, said.

The rhino population has climbed in recent years amid the government's anti-poaching and conservati­on initiative­s.

But the illegal trade of rhino horns - prized in China and Southeast Asia for their supposed medicinal properties - remains a threat. Some 26 rhinos died in Nepal last year, including four from poaching.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows a one-horned rhinoceros crossing the Rapati River in Sauraha Chitwan, some 150km southwest of Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, on January 1, 2020
(AFP) This file photo shows a one-horned rhinoceros crossing the Rapati River in Sauraha Chitwan, some 150km southwest of Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, on January 1, 2020

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