/ 19 March 2012

‘No more rhinos in SA game parks by 2050’

'no More Rhinos In Sa Game Parks By 2050'

Rhinos will be wiped out from South Africa’s wildlife parks by 2050 if poaching continues at its current rate, a campaigner fighting to save the beasts has warned.

And corruption among officials is contributing to the ongoing slaughter, says veterinary nurse Karen Trendler.

In a career spanning almost two decades, 50-year-old Trendler has raised 200 baby rhino orphans at a wildlife sanctuary in Pretoria, earning the nickname “Mama Rhino”.

She is planning to open a special treatment centre for them, warning that the situation has become critical.

Poachers nabbed 448 rhinos last year, and in the first three months of this year the toll stood at 109 — in other words, a kill rate of more than one a day.

While the poachers target the adult rhinos for their horns, baby rhinos often die too, unable to survive alone.

The sharp increase in poaching has raised concerns among experts that the animals could disappear from the wild within the next four years, Trendler says.

“You hate to sound alarmist, you hate to even consider that it could happen. But if the poaching continues at the current rate we could eventually see rhino go extinct.

“There are predictions that by 2050 we could have no rhino.”

The problem has been exacerbated by the fact that some people working in wildlife conservation and animal welfare have been implicated in the lucrative poaching industry, says Trendler.

“There are some incredibly good guys in the business who are doing amazing things and who would give their lives for those rhino.

“But unfortunately we do have an element of corruption. There have already been prosecutions and arrests, where government officials are complicit.”

The booming market for rhino horn and increasingly sophisticated poaching methods help explain the devastating death-rate, she says.

“There is a growing economy in Asia, so there is more disposable income to pay for Chinese traditional medicine.

“There is easier accessibility, poachers have better technology, so using cellphones and GPS they can move the horn that much quicker through the process.

“On top of that there’s the sinister part of it where it’s actually being stockpiled against extinction.

“So they just take up as much as they can get and it’s held in stockpile for the time when the numbers drop and the value of the horn goes up,” says Trendler.

Some private owners are pushing to have the trade in rhino horns legalised, arguing that prohibition has done nothing to stop poaching, something that Trendler vehemently opposes.

She is busy building a rhino orphanage at a golf and leisure resort near Mokopane in Limpopo, in the north of the country.

Presented as South Africa’s first non-commercial and non-tourist rhino orphanage, it will have an intensive care unit with incubators, drips and surveillance cameras.

A small team of carers will look after the baby rhinos, and human contact will be kept to a minimum because the aim is to release them back into the wild.

Once they are strong enough to leave the unit, they will be introduced to their “surrogate parents,” a pair of adult rhinos who live in the resort’s game park, she says.

“We’ve had phenomenal success in the past with rhinos who are naturally very nurturing or who have a lovely nature who’ll take on calves and become a friend or a companion.”

“Given the characteristics of the two rhino that are here, we believe they are probably going to form bonds with the calves.” — Sapa-AFP

A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that at the rate of poaching in South Africa, the rhino population would be extinct by 2015. This has been corrected to 2050.