Fertile rhino needs a mate
AUTHORITIES are trying to trap a female mate for Tam, a rare Borneo Sumatran rhinoceros, in a last-ditch effort to produce an offspring in captivity and save his species from extinction, a top wildlife official said in Malaysia yesterday.
Laurentius Ambu said Tam's current mate was too old to reproduce.
Tam was rescued from the jungles of Sabah state on Borneo island two years ago and is one of the handful of Borneo Sumatran rhinos believed to be alive.
"We are looking for a reproductive fertile female," said Ambu, the director of Sabah's Wildlife Department. "The female that we have is quite old now."
Hopes for saving the Borneo Sumatran from extinction were raised following the recent spotting of a rhino believed to be a female, whose image was captured by a remotely controlled camera, Ambu said.
The trap is in an area on Borneo island where the solitary rhinos, indigenous to the island, are known to roam.
Only 10 to 30 Borneo Sumatran rhinos - a subspecies of the bristly, snub-nosed Sumatran rhino - are known to remain in the wild.
So it is crucial that the breeding-in-captivity program launched two years ago when Tam was rescued bears fruit.
So far this year images of only two rhinos have been captured by the remotely controlled cameras set up in the jungle, Ambu said.
The first rhino, photographed in February, is thought to be pregnant, raising hopes the endangered animal may be breeding in the wild.
The other one could be a potential mate for Tam, Ambu said.
Tam was rescued in August 2008, wandering in an oil palm plantation on the edge of Borneo's rainforest with an infected leg likely caused by a poacher's trap.
He has been resettled in a wildlife reserve in the state.
The critically endangered Borneo Sumatran rhinos have rapidly vanished in recent decades from some 200 about a half-century ago as logging, plantations and other development have destroyed some of their habitat.
Poachers also hunt them for their horns and other body parts, which are used in traditional medicine.
Conservationists have warned the rhinos could face extinction in the next 10 years.
Laurentius Ambu said Tam's current mate was too old to reproduce.
Tam was rescued from the jungles of Sabah state on Borneo island two years ago and is one of the handful of Borneo Sumatran rhinos believed to be alive.
"We are looking for a reproductive fertile female," said Ambu, the director of Sabah's Wildlife Department. "The female that we have is quite old now."
Hopes for saving the Borneo Sumatran from extinction were raised following the recent spotting of a rhino believed to be a female, whose image was captured by a remotely controlled camera, Ambu said.
The trap is in an area on Borneo island where the solitary rhinos, indigenous to the island, are known to roam.
Only 10 to 30 Borneo Sumatran rhinos - a subspecies of the bristly, snub-nosed Sumatran rhino - are known to remain in the wild.
So it is crucial that the breeding-in-captivity program launched two years ago when Tam was rescued bears fruit.
So far this year images of only two rhinos have been captured by the remotely controlled cameras set up in the jungle, Ambu said.
The first rhino, photographed in February, is thought to be pregnant, raising hopes the endangered animal may be breeding in the wild.
The other one could be a potential mate for Tam, Ambu said.
Tam was rescued in August 2008, wandering in an oil palm plantation on the edge of Borneo's rainforest with an infected leg likely caused by a poacher's trap.
He has been resettled in a wildlife reserve in the state.
The critically endangered Borneo Sumatran rhinos have rapidly vanished in recent decades from some 200 about a half-century ago as logging, plantations and other development have destroyed some of their habitat.
Poachers also hunt them for their horns and other body parts, which are used in traditional medicine.
Conservationists have warned the rhinos could face extinction in the next 10 years.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 沪ICP证:沪ICP备05050403号-1
- |
- 互联网新闻信息服务许可证:31120180004
- |
- 网络视听许可证:0909346
- |
- 广播电视节目制作许可证:沪字第354号
- |
- 增值电信业务经营许可证:沪B2-20120012
Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.