I've had a mad moment, but it's so mad it might just work
.
We all know, with such a small population of Javan rhinoceros' (40-50 R. sondaicus sondaicus, and less than 12 R. sondaicus annamiticus) and because the 'sondaicus' population is under threat from a volcano on their site, there is a need to maintain an insurance population in zoos. But the small population again hinders when you realise even removing a single animal is likely to be a problem. So, my mad moment:
Could conservationists looking after either of these populations in the wild find a way to take sperm from a wild male, and an egg from a wild female. If the egg could be impregnated out of a womb using modern science, could it then be implanted into a female Indian rhinoceros (since they are genetically very similar), with the Indian rhinoceros acting as surrogate? Is this IVF, and how well would it work?
Also, I know that there is the problem of Indian rhinos being a threatened species, and that zoos should not be using valuable females for anything other than breeding Indian rhinoceros. However, they are listed as 'Vulnerable' and desperate times call for desperate measures. Surely, if this could ever work, one or two zoos could participate, whilst other zoos keep the Indian population going as strong as possible. Of course, if we could get 5-10 calves this way we could try for natural births, but we need that foothold if we are to get a secure population in captivity, and I think taking animals from the wild is the very last resort.
So, what do you all think? Could it work, would it be physically possible, has it been tried before and failed? Could an Indian rhino act as surrogate, or would it reject the embryo/whatever is implanted? Gotta be worth a shot if there is no good reason not to?
We all know, with such a small population of Javan rhinoceros' (40-50 R. sondaicus sondaicus, and less than 12 R. sondaicus annamiticus) and because the 'sondaicus' population is under threat from a volcano on their site, there is a need to maintain an insurance population in zoos. But the small population again hinders when you realise even removing a single animal is likely to be a problem. So, my mad moment:
Could conservationists looking after either of these populations in the wild find a way to take sperm from a wild male, and an egg from a wild female. If the egg could be impregnated out of a womb using modern science, could it then be implanted into a female Indian rhinoceros (since they are genetically very similar), with the Indian rhinoceros acting as surrogate? Is this IVF, and how well would it work?
Also, I know that there is the problem of Indian rhinos being a threatened species, and that zoos should not be using valuable females for anything other than breeding Indian rhinoceros. However, they are listed as 'Vulnerable' and desperate times call for desperate measures. Surely, if this could ever work, one or two zoos could participate, whilst other zoos keep the Indian population going as strong as possible. Of course, if we could get 5-10 calves this way we could try for natural births, but we need that foothold if we are to get a secure population in captivity, and I think taking animals from the wild is the very last resort.
So, what do you all think? Could it work, would it be physically possible, has it been tried before and failed? Could an Indian rhino act as surrogate, or would it reject the embryo/whatever is implanted? Gotta be worth a shot if there is no good reason not to?