Daily News

Time ticking for extinction-threatened rhino

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IT’S not quite a case of coitus interruptu­s, but efforts to create a very special baby are definitely on hold. Blame the pandemic.

Groundbrea­king work to keep alive the nearly extinct northern white rhino subspecies – population, two – by in-vitro fertilisat­ion has been stalled by travel restrictio­ns. And time is running out.

The two northern white rhinos are female. The goal is to create viable embryos in a lab by inseminati­ng their eggs with frozen sperm from dead males, then transfer them into a surrogate mother, a more common southern white rhino.

“It’s been disrupted by Covid-19, like everything else,” said Richard Vigne, managing director of Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y in Kenya, home of the two remaining rhinos.

“That is, the process of collecting more eggs from the females as well as the process of developing the technique to introduce the northern white rhino embryo into the southern white rhino females.”

It’s an internatio­nal effort that includes conservati­onists from Kenya, the Czech Republic, Germany and Italy – many affected by closed borders or restricted travel.

For those involved in the effort, acutely aware of time, the delay can be painful. The procedure to create viable embryos has proven to be safe, they say, and can be performed regularly before the animals become too old.

In January, the transfer of the embryos to surrogates had been planned for the coming months. In March, the plan had been to collect another round of eggs from the two remaining females.

Because those eggs are limited, scientists are working with embryos from southern white rhinos until they can establish a successful pregnancy. Seven or eight transfers so far have failed to take hold. A receptive female is needed, along with the knowledge of exactly when she ovulates.

“We know time is working against us,” said Cesare Galli, an in-vitro fertilisat­ion expert based in Italy. “The females will age and we don’t have many to choose from.”

He hopes restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel will loosen in the coming weeks so key steps can resume in August.

“The problem is quite serious,” he said. “Certainly as soon as internatio­nal travel is resumed, it will be the first priority to go to Kenya and collect more eggs from the two females.”

Even when travel can resume, another problem looms.

The Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y was also home to primates – non-human primates – that were susceptibl­e to the coronaviru­s, Galli said.

“If you bring in the virus accidental­ly, it’s a risk,” he said. “You threaten one species to save another.”

So for now, the two northern white rhinos wait. Fatu and her mother, Najin, roam and graze within sight of rangers in the company of one intended surrogate mother, a southern white rhino named Tewa.

One of the rhinos’ keepers, Zachariah Mutai, was sympatheti­c.

“They won’t have a chance any more to have babies in a natural way, so the only hope is to save them the scientific way,” he said.

The ultimate goal is to create a herd of at least five animals that could be returned to their natural habitat. That could take decades.

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