Los Angeles Times

Rhinoceros’ pregnancy is a sign of hope

Second expectant female holds promise for project to save dying subspecies.

- BRADLEY J. FIKES bradley.fikes@sduniontri­bune.com Fikes writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

A second expectant female at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park holds promise for an effort to save a nearly extinct subspecies.

SAN DIEGO — A second rhino has become pregnant this year through artificial inseminati­on at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, another milestone for an ambitious program to rescue a rhino subspecies with stem cells.

Researcher­s hope 10year-old Amani and five other southern white rhinos will become surrogate mothers of northern white rhinos, which are critically endangered. The pregnancie­s of Amani, announced last week, and Victoria, announced in May, are dry runs for the goal of implanting northern white rhino embryos.

Just two northern white rhinos are left in the world, both female and too old to reproduce. This means the subspecies is functional­ly extinct.

Nola, a northern white rhino at the Safari Park, died in 2015. She was then one of only four left. Sudan, the last male, died in March at the Ol Pejeta Conservanc­y in Kenya.

So if the northern white rhino is to have any future, it will come from human interventi­on.

The embryos are to be created from cryogenica­lly preserved northern white rhino cells. These are stored at the Frozen Zoo, a project of San Diego Zoo Global, the zoo’s conservati­on arm. It was establishe­d in the 1970s by the late Kurt Benirschke, who foresaw that these cells might one day be turned into complete animals.

The process is complicate­d. The frozen cells will be thawed and converted into stem cells.

The stem cells will be turned into germ cells — sperm and egg cells. After fertilizat­ion creates the embryos, researcher­s will implant them into the surrogate rhinos.

If all goes as planned, these pregnancie­s will be carried to term, and the northern white rhino will have a second shot at survival.

Team members on the project include Jeanne Loring, a stem cell scientist at Scripps Research. The Frozen Zoo has 12 samples, nine of which have been thawed and “reprogramm­ed” into lines of stem cells.

Five of those nine lines have been well studied, and are the subject of a recently submitted paper, she said.

Although it’s unclear if the three remaining samples can be of use, the nine lines already recovered provide sufficient genetic diversity to generate a viable population, Loring said.

There are early signs of germ cell developmen­t, Loring said. Stem cells were allowed to spontaneou­sly differenti­ate into adult cells of various types. Some of them became “primordial germ cells,” precursors of both sperm and egg cells.

“But a lot of the work is ahead of us,” she said. “We need to purify those cells out of the rest and improve the methods for generating more of them.”

In the meantime, the southern white rhino females are being acclimated to this unusual way of becoming mothers.

They have been carefully and patiently trained with positive reinforcem­ent to voluntaril­y accept highly intimate medical exams from keepers. This is done to minimize stress, which could endanger the pregnancy. The hope is that several years from now, each of the southern white rhino females will receive a northern white rhino embryo and carry it to term.

It’s too early to tell whether Amani’s and Victoria’s pregnancie­s will be successful. Southern white rhino pregnancie­s typically last 16 to 18 months.

And as for the births of new northern white rhinos, Loring says she’s optimistic, but they may take a while.

“I'm hoping it happens in my lifetime,” she said. “I can’t really tell you how long it’s going to be. There’s a lot of work to be done, but it just seems really feasible to me. We can see the path.”

‘But a lot of the work is ahead of us. We need to purify those cells out of the rest and improve the methods for generating more of them.’ — Jeanne Loring, stem cell scientist at Scripps Research

 ?? Photograph­s by Ken Bohn San Diego Zoo Global ?? DRS. Parker Pennington, left, and Barbara Durrant, director of reproducti­ve physiology, perform a sonogram on Amani, who became pregnant through artificial inseminati­on at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. Southern white rhino pregnancie­s last 16 to 18 months.
Photograph­s by Ken Bohn San Diego Zoo Global DRS. Parker Pennington, left, and Barbara Durrant, director of reproducti­ve physiology, perform a sonogram on Amani, who became pregnant through artificial inseminati­on at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. Southern white rhino pregnancie­s last 16 to 18 months.
 ??  ?? SCIENTISTS HOPE Amani and five other southern white rhinos will become surrogate mothers of northern white rhinos, whose population has fallen to two.
SCIENTISTS HOPE Amani and five other southern white rhinos will become surrogate mothers of northern white rhinos, whose population has fallen to two.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States