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An Italian lab could hold the key to saving the northern white rhino

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
An Italian lab could hold the key to saving the northern white rhino
The world's last female pair of northern white rhinos, Najin (L) and Fatu. Photo: Tony Karumba/AFP

Conservationists have successfully created two northern white rhino embryos in a key step towards pulling the species back from the brink of extinction, scientists in Italy said on Wednesday.

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There are only two survivors in the world, and both are female and unable to carry calves. The last male, named Sudan, died at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya last year, making scientists the majestic animals' last chance.

Using eggs harvested from the females and frozen sperm from deceased males, a team in Cremona in Italy has been able to create two viable embryos, according to the BioRescue international consortium of scientists.

READ ALSO: An Italian company hopes to save the northern white rhino through IVF

Najin, 30, and daughter Fatu, 19, are the last of the subspecies of white rhino, and live under 24-hour armed guard. Neither is able to carry a calf. Fatu has degenerative lesions in her uterus and Najin has weak hind legs which could cause complications if she fell pregnant.

In August they underwent a highly risky procedure carried out by a team of international vets, which saw them anaesthetised for almost two hours, and their eggs extracted using techniques that have taken years of research and development.

At the Italian biotech laboratory Avantea, those eggs were then fertilized with sperm from males Suni and Saut -- though only two of Fatu's eggs developed into viable embryos. They have now been stored in liquid nitrogen to be transferred into a surrogate mother in the near future.


Najin (R) and Fatu, the only two remaining female northern white rhino, in their paddock. Photo: Tony Karumba/AFP

"Five years ago, it seemed like the production of a northern white rhino embryo was an almost unachievable goal -- and today we have them," said Jan Stejskal, communications director at the Dvur Kralove Zoo, where Najin and Fatu were born. The coming months would be dedicated to optimizing a technique to transfer the embryos into a surrogate rhino, he said.

Richard Vigne, managing director of Ol Pejeta, hailed the "major step forward", but warned "we have a very long way to go".

"Global human behaviour still needs to radically change if the lessons of the northern white rhinos are to be learned," he said.

Rhinos have few predators in the wild due to their size but have been devastated by poaching for their horns, used in traditional Chinese medicine.

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