Sounds strange, rhinos bear only one calf, so siblings never encounter each other!
In any case, anybody knows some written source of these rhinos seen in Sudan?![]()
It is even in czech mainstream newspapers.
Sounds strange, rhinos bear only one calf, so siblings never encounter each other!
In any case, anybody knows some written source of these rhinos seen in Sudan?![]()
Genetics: indeed the diversity is rather low at 4+3 (probably some relatedness in there too). However, even the southern whites were down to 20+/- in the early 1900's and now there is 17,500.
Presumably the ex Dvur 4 animals and the Sudanese 3 wild animals cannot be related at all, but I know that one of the ex Dvur females is the daughter of one of the two males.
I agree that the Southern Whites' success could, with the right management and considerable luck, still be replicated even with this tiny remnant of Northerns.
I dont get your point. Are you asking whether or how much are those four NWR specimen related? Check the link it is there somewhere in FAQ/media section.anyone know how many NWR lineages exist in preserved genetic material worldwide?
because if there is a decent number of founders, the entire purebred population could be "rebooted" in future decades when technology improves.
I dont get your point. Are you asking whether or how much are those four NWR specimen related?
Chlidonias said:I believe Phoenix is referring to museum specimens from which DNA may be able to be obtained
Actually, I don't think phoenix is talking about museum specimens - I think he's referring to the frozen zoo, specifically ova and sperm donors.
however, if we are contemplating actually preserving the subspecies in pure form, then cloning is the only feasible way of doing so long term.
i'd be keen to know if there is just enough founders to avert a serious inbreeding problem long term.
but effectively the current program in kenya should be seen for what it is. an attempt to integrate some of the NWR genes into a new hybrid population. not an attempt to fully save a taxa.