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Rhino Dies During Anti-Poaching Efforts In South Africa


First Posted: 02/ 9/2012 10:30 am Updated: 04/10/2012 5:12 am

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — An attempt to protect a rhinoceros from poachers in South Africa by sedating it to treat its horn ended with the animal's death Thursday in front of journalists and others who had been invited to learn more about anti-poaching efforts, conservationists said.

"It's sad for us; it's the loss of another animal. It's a death that I still chalk up to poaching," said Lorinda Hern, spokeswoman for the Rhino & Lion Nature Reserve, saying extreme measures are necessary because of a poaching crisis in South Africa.

The private reserve near the capital, Pretoria, calls in veterinarians to sedate rhinos so their horns can be treated with a dye and an insecticide, and tracking and identification devices can be inserted. A male in his mid to late 20s, fairly old for such an animal, could not be revived after being sedated Thursday, Hern said.

Last year, a record 448 rhinos were poached in South Africa. Demand for rhino horn among a growing Asian middle class is believed to be driving the poaching spike in South Africa and elsewhere in Africa. Some Asians believe a rhino horn has medicinal properties, though science does not support that.

Joseph Okori, a wildlife veterinarian and a World Wildlife Fund rhino expert, was an independent observer of Thursday's procedure as part of WWF's research into anti-poaching techniques. Okori said WWF did not support infusing horns with insecticides, which can be dangerous to humans who might eat powdered rhino horn. But he said the dye, which did not affect the outward appearance of the horn, could help law enforcement officials trace horn shipments. Airport security devices can detect the dye, Okori said.

Okori said he had sedated about 50 rhinos for various reasons, including to relocate animals, in the last 15 years. He said one animal under his care had died.

"There is always a potential risk" that a sedated animal will die, Okori said. But "the whole issue is, we are facing a serious rhino poaching crisis. This is a war. The desperation is quite high for rhino owners, to do whatever it takes to protect their rhinos."

Hern said the reserve began treating horns to make them unattractive to poachers after losing a pregnant rhino and her calf to poachers in 2010. She said Thursday's death was the first among up to 20 rhinos that have undergone the procedure, and that the death would not stop the reserve from performing the procedure.

The dye permeates the horn's interior with a neon pink dye similar to that banks use to mark bills during robberies. The insecticide, which protects rhinos against ticks, can cause vomiting and other symptoms in humans. Hern said her reserve's intention was not to hurt humans, but to deter poachers from killing animals to take their horns.

Hern said tests are under way to determine the cause of death, initially attributed to complications from either the sedative or the drug intended to revive the animal.

____

Donna Bryson can be reached at http://twitter.com/dbrysonAP

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02:17 PM on 02/10/2012
It's unfortunate but that's why we have the word 'accident' in our vocabulary. Besides it was an older rhino so it could have been old age. I'm sure they feel bad enough since their whole purpose is to save these animals.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
02:04 PM on 02/10/2012
Dyeing is a desperate measure. Until the poaching is stopped, how else can you protect wild living animals out in the boonies? Horn removal has been considered as well. Denying the poacher his/her reward may be the only answer to the drive to make money off wild animals.
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intolleft
ObamaCare...getting you shovel ready
10:24 AM on 02/10/2012
IOW, the conservationists killed it.
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Chipher
05:50 AM on 02/10/2012
"She says the dyeing will continue." ...and so will the dying. The 'inexhaustible' mid-water pollock resources of the Bering Sea which fed the processing ships 'inexhaustible' maws for 20 years have finally been depleted. Both the A and B season were disasters in Dutch Harbor last year, and yet NOT ONE WORD in the media, because bad news doesn't sell fish tacos for Ivar's Shrimp Shack.
10:03 AM on 02/11/2012
Off topic, and totally incorrect. Please read the Alaska pollock documents at
http://www.afsc.noaa.gov/REFM/docs/2011/EBSpollock.pdf
One season where some fishermen had difficult finding fish, does not indicate "depletion".
Do you work for the beef industry?
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cmfrtblebbw
My micro bio is empty
08:40 PM on 02/09/2012
Rhino One: "Oh man, hear what happened to a shark in Pakistan the other day?....."

Rhino Two: "Hold on a sec, this dye is making me..."
07:40 PM on 02/09/2012
This is the BEST quote, that wasn't included is this writeup:

""It's sad for us; it's the loss of another animal," Hern said, referring to the rhino's death. "It's a death that I still chalk up to poaching."
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ScooterLiddy
IT Project Manager, retired Air Force officer, run
04:39 PM on 02/09/2012
The Rhino was 22 years old. It might have died from natural causes.
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olitenup
04:22 PM on 02/09/2012
What a loss, what a loss. When are the leaders of the countries that have these out-dated remedies going tp help us stop the murdering of our wild life. This is so sad.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
11:05 AM on 02/10/2012
And what more current remedies would you suggest that have not been tried?
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Welease Wodewick
What's her name? Virginia Plain!
04:07 PM on 02/09/2012
"She says the dyeing will continue".

A poor choice of words, perhaps.

It's a tragedy, that conservationists have to go the lengths they do, in order to try and save the rhinos.

Rhinos, are almost extinct in the wild. They have been on Earth for over 14 million years, but now, due to a dumb belief that their horn has medicinal properties, we have almost wiped them out.

The loss of this one rhino, is very, very sad.

VP
06:17 PM on 02/09/2012
Same for the tiger. Our modern world advances, but the belief in these folk remedies still persists. :(
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kwaut lizard
Reductio ad Absurdum
02:46 AM on 02/11/2012
A big but unpopular fact about tigers is that there are large numbers on farms and it is an extremely instinctual animal that can be quite easily reoriented to a life in the wild.

Whereas the last rhino will in fact be the last rhino.

The Worldwide Fund for Nature declared Vietnam's Javan rhino extinct in October – the last one was found shot dead, horn removed.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9X65Z6JEBUk
07:04 PM on 02/09/2012
One of the big unforeseen problems,come directly from China,as the Chinese are now making more money and the millionaires in china are growing fast,more can afford these remedies even the every expensive ones, thought to make men fertile and a cure for a host of others. China's good fortune has become devastating to wild life around the world.the laws there are weak on the subject and are often not carried out because the wealthy and high ups in the government still believe it these remedies themselves.I see just the same thing happening to the shark population where they pull up hundreds of Juvenal sharks cut off all the fins while alive and throw 98% of the shark they don't need, back into the water for a slow horrid death by drowning, and picked to death by smaller fish,all for a tiny piece of fin in a bowel of soup.
07:42 PM on 02/09/2012
I saw the shark fin harvest on television, and was shocked at how brutal it is. Harvesting the fin from a live animal and tossing the rest of him back into the ocean like it was nothing. Just awful. Another magnificently evolved creature, who has survived over hundreds of millions of years, except for mankind. It's got to stop. :(