Scientists harvest more eggs from near-extinct northern white rhino
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[August 19, 2020]
By NAZANINE MOSHIRI
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Scientists racing to
save the northern white rhino from extinction have harvested 10 more
eggs from the last two females alive which they hope will help create
viable embryos that can be incubated by other rhinos acting as
surrogates.
Neither of the remaining northern white rhinos on Earth - a mother and
her daughter - can carry a baby to term, so scientists want to implant
the embryos into southern white rhinos instead.
The last male northern white rhino, named Sudan, died in Kenya's Ol
Pejeta Conservancy in 2018.
The northern white rhino once wandered through east and central Africa
but, as with other rhino species, its numbers plummeted due to heavy
poaching.
Northern white rhinos - now the world's most endangered mammal - have
hairier ears and tails, are shorter and stockier and have different
genes than their southern cousins.
Scientists first harvested eggs from the females a year ago, as part of
a team from the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, Kenya Wildlife Service,
Italian-based Avantea Lab, the Czech Republic's Dvůr Králové Zoo, and
the Germany-based Leibniz Institute for Zoo & Wildlife Research.
They produced three pure northern white rhino embryos that are now
frozen. But the scientists realised they must synchronise implanting
embryos with the reproductive cycle of the surrogate mothers. The more
embryos they have, the better.
One potential snag is that humans do not know how to detect when the
time to insert the embryo is right.
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Najin, the oldest of the two northern white rhinos, is seen in a
secured pen before undergoing the ovum pick-up procedure at the Ol
Pejeta Conservancy near Nanyuki, Kenya August 18, 2020. Ol Pajeta
Conservancy/Rio The Photographer/Handout via REUTERS
Enter the romantic decoy.
A southern white rhino bull will be sterilised, transported to Ol
Pejeta and set loose among potential surrogate mothers. His response
will signal when they are on heat.
"Thanks to his activities we would be able to identify the right
time for inserting the embryo," team coordinator Jan Stejskal, from
Dvůr Králové Zoo, told Reuters.
"We start early in the morning, the first female is immobilised and
then the procedure lasts for about two hours," Stejskal said of the
egg harvest.
The eggs are so delicate they must be immediately flown to a
laboratory in Europe in an incubator hand-carried by a scientist.
"If you want to start a population of the northern white rhino, one
baby is not enough, you need as many babies as possible," Stejskal
said.
(Writing by George Obulutsa; editing by Katharine Houreld and Mike
Collett-White)
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