This is terrible. Let us hope Cincinnati can quickly get another female so the captive breeding program is not delayed any longer than necessary.
Tragic.
Lets hope that Andalas will be a father soon. Will Harapan be ok without his mum?
Emi's death is a real surprise. I thought the male Ipuh would die first as he is much older than Emi. Now they have the(old) father and(young) daughter left at Cincinnati and I wonder where they will go from here.
Not ideal suggestion coming up, but could show whether there is much point in continuing the program is to breed Ipuh and Suci, if Suci has that first calf then I feel there is real merit in capturing 1.1 individuals from the wild. A male for Suci and a female for Harapan at White Oak.
, taking more animals from the wild would be grossly irresponsible considering the overall near-total failure of the captive breeding program.
t I saw on nat geo once that there was a project over a number of years to capture sumatran rhinos in the wild, they had a quite number of them, but due to the lack of knowledge of their diet, every single one unfortunately died.
I'm unsure but it might of been sungai dusun.
Sadly for those of us (including me) who tend to be interventionist when it comes to conservation... the best chance for the Sumatran rhino is in-situ conservation./QUOTE]
Even in-situ conservation is likely to be 'interventionist', in that animals will need to be captured and moved between the various fragmented populations in order to maintain genetic diversity. There is no non-interventionist route left for the Sumatran Rhino. In light of that, and the advances made in captive husbandry, I feel it would be justified to bring a small number of individuals into the USA to further the ex situ breeding programme.
Sadly for those of us (including me) who tend to be interventionist when it comes to conservation... the best chance for the Sumatran rhino is in-situ conservation./QUOTE]
Even in-situ conservation is likely to be 'interventionist', in that animals will need to be captured and moved between the various fragmented populations in order to maintain genetic diversity. There is no non-interventionist route left for the Sumatran Rhino. In light of that, and the advances made in captive husbandry, I feel it would be justified to bring a small number of individuals into the USA to further the ex situ breeding programme.
Indeed. Those that think otherwise have their palm oil containers in the wrong basket!
Sumatran rhinos will not survive the onslaught of the next 50-75 years if we do not aggressively conserve their habitat, find sustainable solutions for poor deprived local communities and move rhinos between different habitats (both on Sumatera, Indonesia and Sabah, Malaysia - the latter being a true project for capture and relocation to intensively managed + fenced special rhino area).
RIP, lets hope another zoo gets them in the future and get more blood into the gene pool, can i ask, can the rhinos still breed without Emi?