Daily Tribune (Philippines)

First radioactiv­e rhino horns to curb poaching

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MOKOPANE, South Africa (AFP) — South African scientists on Tuesday injected radioactiv­e material into live rhino horns to make them easier to detect at border posts in a pioneering project aimed at curbing poaching.

The country is home to a large majority of the world’s rhinos and as such is a hotspot for poaching driven by demand from Asia, where horns are used in traditiona­l medicine for their supposed therapeuti­c effect.

At the Limpopo rhino orphanage in the Waterberg area, in the country’s northeast, a few of the thick-skinned herbivores grazed in the low savannah.

James Larkin, director of the University of the Witwatersr­and’s radiation and health physics unit who spearheade­d the initiative, told Agence France-Presse he had put “two tiny little radioactiv­e chips in the horn” as he administer­ed the radioisoto­pes on one of the large animals’ horns.

The radioactiv­e material would “render the horn useless... essentiall­y poisonous for human consumptio­n,” added Nithaya Chetty, professor and dean of science at the same university.

The dusty rhino, put to sleep and crouched on the ground, did not feel any pain, Larkin said.

The radioactiv­e material’s dose was so low it would not impact the animal’s health or the environmen­t in any way, he said.

In February the environmen­t ministry said that, despite government efforts to tackle the illicit trade, 499 of the giant mammals were killed in 2023, mostly in state-run parks. This represents an 11 percent increase over the 2022 figures.

Twenty live rhinos in total would be part of the pilot Rhisotope project whereby they would be administer­ed a dose “strong enough to set off detectors that are installed globally” at internatio­nal border posts originally installed “to prevent nuclear terrorism,” a pleased Larkin said, sporting a green hat and a khaki shirt.

Border agents often have handheld radiation detectors which can detect contraband in addition to thousands of radiation detectors installed at ports and airports, the scientists said.

 ?? YUICHI YAMAZAKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? WIKILEAKS founder Julian Assange leaves the United States federal courthouse in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands on 26 June 2024, after pleading guilty to a single count of conspiracy to obtain and disseminat­e national defense informatio­n. A US judge then freed Julian Assange, who was long wanted by Washington for revealing military secrets.
YUICHI YAMAZAKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE WIKILEAKS founder Julian Assange leaves the United States federal courthouse in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands on 26 June 2024, after pleading guilty to a single count of conspiracy to obtain and disseminat­e national defense informatio­n. A US judge then freed Julian Assange, who was long wanted by Washington for revealing military secrets.

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