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Meet the rarest animal in the world — with only two of them still alive
Meet the rarest animal in the world — with only two of them still alive

Indian Express

time01-08-2025

  • Science
  • Indian Express

Meet the rarest animal in the world — with only two of them still alive

In a world of over eight million species, the idea that some animals exist in numbers you can count on one hand is both fascinating and heartbreaking. Among them, one holds a particularly tragic title. The Northern White Rhino is a creature that has become the global symbol of how close we are to losing parts of nature forever. Once roaming across central Africa, the Northern White Rhino is now functionally extinct. Only two females remain — Najin and Fatu — under constant armed guard in Kenya's Ol Pejeta Conservancy. The last male, Sudan, died in 2018, closing the door on natural reproduction. What's left of the species now rests in labs, where scientists race against time using in-vitro fertilisation techniques to try and bring new life from frozen cells and harvested eggs. The odds are slim. The hope, however, remains. Yet the Northern White Rhino isn't the only species walking this tightrope between existence and extinction. Around the world, a handful of animals live lives so hidden, or in numbers so tiny, that they rarely make it to headlines but face similar fates. Take the Vaquita, a small porpoise found only in Mexico's Gulf of California. With perhaps fewer than 20 individuals alive today, their future is darkened by accidental deaths in illegal fishing nets. Despite international bans, conservation efforts often feel like a race against poachers and time itself. Then there's the Saola, sometimes called the 'Asian unicorn.' Discovered only in 1992 in the Annamite Mountains of Laos and Vietnam, it has rarely been seen since. With sightings so scarce, many locals and even scientists believe they've slipped into folklore. But evidence of their survival keeps hope alive. The Javan Rhino is no less extraordinary, and endangered. With a population estimated at about 74 individuals, all living in a single national park in Indonesia, their entire species could be wiped out by a single natural disaster or disease outbreak. What stands between them and extinction is a thin veil of dense jungle and tight conservation controls. And then, in the oceans, is perhaps the rarest marine mystery of them all: the Spade-Toothed Whale. No living specimen has ever been recorded. Scientists know of its existence only through a handful of dead whales that washed ashore over decades. The spade-toothed whale is a stark reminder that even in an age of satellites and deep-sea exploration, some creatures remain almost entirely unknown to us. Each of these species, whether living in remote forests, oceans, or surviving under armed guard, tells a story of a planet on edge. The Northern White Rhino might be the face of extinction, but it shares this haunting stage with many others. They are nature's rarest survivors and perhaps, in their struggle, they are the loudest call we have to protect what's left of our world.

Baraka, Kenya's blind rhino: An adventurous soul with a sweet tooth
Baraka, Kenya's blind rhino: An adventurous soul with a sweet tooth

The Star

time26-06-2025

  • General
  • The Star

Baraka, Kenya's blind rhino: An adventurous soul with a sweet tooth

Completely unfazed by ­camera clicks and luring calls, Baraka munches on the grass of the savannah. With his massive body, thick grey skin and the pointed horn, the black rhino appears invincible. But life for Baraka, whose name means 'the blessed one' in Swahili, is challenging. The 30-year-old rhino bull is blind, after he lost one eye in a fight with another rhino in 2008, and the other due to a cataract. If Baraka were to roam freely through the savannah of the Kenyan highlands, he would be an easy target – in clashes with rival rhinos, or for poachers. In the private sanctuary Ol Pejeta in the Mount Kenya region, however, the black rhino lives in the safety of a 100-acre (40.5 hectares) compound, ­protected by caretakers. He is not the only rhino celebrity of the sanctuary. Ol Pejeta is also home to the last two remaining northern white rhinos in the world. After the death of the male Sultan in 2018, the species is functionally extinct. The two remaining females, Najin and Fatu, are protected around the clock by armed ­rangers. A group of rhinos linger next to some zebras, with Mount Kenya towering in the background. — EVA-MARIA KRAFCZYK/dpa Efforts to ensure the survival of the northern white rhino include attempts to facilitate reproduction through IVF. Yet while scientists have successfully created northern white rhino embryos, there have been challenges in implanting these embryos into surrogate southern white rhino mothers. Hope, however, dies last. Baraka, on the other hand, is a kind of ambassador for his critically endangered species. Almost 200 black rhinos live in Ol Pejeta, the largest population in Kenya. Unlike their slightly larger ­relatives, the white rhinos, black rhinos are very shy and are rarely found in the open savannah – they prefer forest areas for browsing. Thanks to Baraka, visitors to Ol Pejeta are guaranteed to see a black rhino. His caretakers know how to lure the rhino to the fence of his enclosure with a piece of sugar cane or some carrots. By scent and markings Even though he is blind, Baraka isn't helpless. He orients himself primarily by scent and markings from urine or faeces, says Grace, one of the rhino's keepers. 'Sometimes, when he gets bored in his enclosure, he does an escape run,' she says about the adventurous heavyweight with a smile on her face. 'We've even found him at the other end of the sanctuary. He just follows his nose whenever something smells interesting.' There are only about 6,000 black rhinos and about 18,000 white rhinos left in all of Africa. Therefore, security is as important in Ol Pejeta as it is in state national parks. A sign at the entrance to Baraka's enclosure. In Ol Pejeta, around 260 employees are responsible for protecting the wildlife. The rangers of the Rhino Patrol Unit track and record rhino sightings. Every black rhino must be sighted at least once every three years by the rangers who roam the sanctuary with binoculars and notebooks. Armed rangers with paramilitarytraining and a dog unit are also deployed in the area to deter poachers. Rhinos are the second largest mammals living on earth, who were once hunted for sport and meat. Today, poachers kill them to meet demand from Asia and the Middle East, where rhino horn is considered to have medicinal properties and is used to make ornamental dagger handles. A kilogramme of rhino horn can fetch up to US$60,000 (RM255,000) on the black market. Yet while elephants are poached because of their ivory tusks, rhino horn is just made of the same substance as human fingernails – keratin. – dpa

North Korea says it has repaired a damaged destroyer and launched it in the water
North Korea says it has repaired a damaged destroyer and launched it in the water

CTV News

time12-06-2025

  • Politics
  • CTV News

North Korea says it has repaired a damaged destroyer and launched it in the water

This satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows a North Korea's new naval destroyer, initially damaged in a failed launch ceremony at the Chongjin port on May 22, shortly after the ship arrived for a ceremonial relaunch at the Rajin dockyard in Najin, North Korea, Sunday, June 8, 2025. (Maxar Technologies via AP) SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Friday it has repaired its damaged second destroyer and launched it into the water in the presence of leader Kim Jong Un. North Korea's Korean Central News Agency said it launched the destroyer - the second it built this year - off the east coast of the country on Thursday. KCNA cited Kim as saying the country's two destroyers will play a big role in improving the North Korean navy's operational capabilities. Kim reiterated previous claims that his naval buildup is a justified response to perceived threats posed by the United States and its allies in Asia, which in recent years have expanded their combined military exercises and updated their deterrence strategies to counter Kim's nuclear ambitions. He said the North will respond to the threats by his rivals with 'overwhelming military action' and vowed to build a navy with 'long-range operational capabilities.' Last month, North Korea said the ship was damaged in a failed launch, sparking fury from Kim, who has vowed to build a stronger navy to cope what he calls escalating U.S.-led threats against his country. Kim earlier said the failed launched was caused by criminal negligence. North Korea's state media later said that authorities detained four officials including the vice director of the Workers' Party's munitions industry department over the botched launch. North Korea's extremely secretive nature makes it virtually impossible to independently confirm its announcement on the ship's repair. Outside experts earlier said it remained unclear how severely the 5,000-ton-class destroyer was damaged and questioned North Korea's announcement that it could repair the ship's damage at an early date. The damaged warship was North Korea's second known destroyer and seen as a crucial asset toward Kim's goal of modernizing its naval forces. It was in the same class as the country's first destroyer unveiled in April, which experts assessed as the North's largest and most advanced warship to date. Kim lavishly praised that ship, which was launched in the western port of Nampo, saying it advances his goal of expanding the military's operations range and nuclear strike capabilities. The Associated Press

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino
'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

Khaleej Times

time27-02-2025

  • Science
  • Khaleej Times

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

Two rhinos munch serenely on grass as the sun rises over Mount Kenya, oblivious to the massive global endeavour to prevent them being the last of their kind. Najin and her daughter Fatu are the only northern white rhinos left on Earth. The clock is ticking before they become the latest in a long line of animals that humans have poached to extinction. But a recent breakthrough means this could be the year the world celebrates a new northern white rhino foetus. It would be an unprecedented comeback for the subspecies, declared functionally extinct after the death of the last male, Sudan, in 2018. Uterus problems mean neither Sudan's daughter Najin nor his granddaughter Fatu can carry a pregnancy to term. But Fatu still produces viable eggs, making her a candidate for in-vitro fertilisation (IVF). For years, scientists have been collecting her eggs at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, where the rhinos remain under 24-hour guard. The eggs are sent to Europe where they are fertilised in a lab with sperm from dead male northern whites. There are now 36 fertilised eggs -- or embryos -- ready to be implanted, said Jan Stejskal, project coordinator for BioRescue, the most prominent of numerous such initiatives worldwide. It is thought Fatu can produce around 10 more eggs before she is too old. "We hope to achieve the first successful pregnancy with the northern rhino embryo this year," Stejskal said. "But I cannot promise it." - 'Mixed with sadness' - The plan is to use a female southern white rhino -- a closely related subspecies -- as a surrogate. A year ago scientists announced a breakthrough: a surrogate was pregnant with a male southern white foetus, the first time IVF had worked for rhinos. But like so much about this long and difficult process, the joy was "mixed with sadness", Ol Pejeta head of research Samuel Mutisya told AFP. By the time the 6.4-centimetre, 70-day-old foetus was discovered, the surrogate had already died from an unrelated bacteria infection. Worse still, a sterilised male who had played the role of "teaser bull" -- to help identify when the female is ready for impregnation -- also died from the infection, and finding a replacement has proved tricky. The team is determined to try again, this time with a northern white embryo. - How many chances? - There are other avenues, including a Japanese effort using stem cells to create northern white rhino eggs and sperm. This could dramatically boost the number of embryos and create a wider gene pool for future inseminations. The stem cell efforts are roughly halfway there, Stejskal said, estimating they could produce embryos in around four years. Meanwhile, another initiative at Oxford University is attempting to use ovary tissue from dead rhinos to create eggs. It could mean that even after Najin, 35, and Fatu, 24, have died, scientists could retrieve immature eggs from their ovaries. Suzannah Williams, a researcher leading the effort, said her "best guess" was they could retrieve a few hundred eggs, even if not all would be viable. But scientists hope for a solution while Najin and Fatu are still alive to teach the future baby how to be a northern white rhino. - 'When, not if' - No one knows how likely it is that an individual IVF attempt will result in pregnancy. It took three attempts for the southern white surrogate, but that is a tiny sample size. Plenty else could go wrong during a rhino pregnancy, which lasts up to 18 months. Stejskal remains optimistic, saying: "We will save them," while Williams agreed it was a matter of "when, not if". Others are unconvinced. Even if babies were born from the embryos, the genetic diversity would still be "too low" to revive the species, Save the Rhino International CEO Jo Shaw told AFP. It is probably too late for northern rhinos, she said, and the focus should be on the Javan and Sumatran subspecies, which each have fewer than 50 surviving. The northern white researchers say the techniques they are developing will help all rhinos, as well as other species. BioRescue's work is already contributing to saving the Sumatran rhino, Stejskal said. Back in the Ol Pejeta enclosure, Najin and Fatu's main handler Zacharia Mutai said that it was humans who poached northern whites to the edge of extinction, so it is our responsibility to bring them back. Mutai, who was there when Sudan died, said the birth of a new baby would be a cause for "world celebration". "And I will be looking after the baby," he said with a smile, as Fatu and Najin kept on munching behind him.

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino
'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

'We will save them': The quest to rescue nearly extinct rhino

Two rhinos munch serenely on grass as the sun rises over Mount Kenya, oblivious to the massive global endeavour to prevent them being the last of their kind. Najin and her daughter Fatu are the only northern white rhinos left on Earth. The clock is ticking before they become the latest in a long line of animals that humans have poached to extinction. But a recent breakthrough means this could be the year the world celebrates a new northern white rhino foetus. It would be an unprecedented comeback for the subspecies, declared functionally extinct after the death of the last male, Sudan, in 2018. Uterus problems mean neither Sudan's daughter Najin nor his granddaughter Fatu can carry a pregnancy to term. But Fatu still produces viable eggs, making her a candidate for in-vitro fertilisation (IVF). For years, scientists have been collecting her eggs at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, where the rhinos remain under 24-hour guard. The eggs are sent to Europe where they are fertilised in a lab with sperm from dead male northern whites. There are now 36 fertilised eggs -- or embryos -- ready to be implanted, said Jan Stejskal, project coordinator for BioRescue, the most prominent of numerous such initiatives worldwide. It is thought Fatu can produce around 10 more eggs before she is too old. "We hope to achieve the first successful pregnancy with the northern rhino embryo this year," said Stejskal. "But I cannot promise it." - 'Mixed with sadness' - The plan is to use a female southern white rhino -- a closely related subspecies -- as a surrogate. A year ago scientists announced a breakthrough: a surrogate was pregnant with a male southern white foetus, the first time IVF had worked for rhinos. But like so much about this long and difficult process, the joy was "mixed with sadness", Ol Pejeta head of research Samuel Mutisya told AFP. By the time the 6.4-centimetre, 70-day-old foetus was discovered, the surrogate had already died from an unrelated bacteria infection. Worse still, a sterilised male who had played the role of "teaser bull" -- to help identify when the female is ready for impregnation -- also died from the infection, and finding a replacement has proved tricky. The team is determined to try again, this time with a northern white embryo. - So how many chances? - There are other avenues, including a Japanese effort using stem cells to create northern white rhino eggs and sperm. This could dramatically boost the number of embryos, and create a wider gene pool for future inseminations. The stem cell efforts are roughly halfway there, Stejskal said, estimating they could produce embryos in around four years. Meanwhile, another initiative at Oxford University is attempting to use ovary tissue from dead rhinos to create eggs. It could mean that even after Najin, 35, and Fatu, 24, have died, scientists could retrieve immature eggs from their ovaries. Suzannah Williams, a researcher leading the effort, said her "best guess" was they could retrieve a few hundred eggs, even if not all would be viable. But scientists hope for a solution while Najin and Fatu are still alive to teach the future baby how to be a northern white rhino. - 'When not if' - No one knows how likely it is that an individual IVF attempt will result in pregnancy. It took three attempts for the southern white surrogate, but that is a tiny sample size. Plenty else could go wrong during a rhino pregnancy, which lasts up to 18 months. Stejskal remains optimistic, insisting: "We will save them," while Williams agreed it was a matter of "when, not if". Others are unconvinced. Even if babies were born from the embryos, the genetic diversity would still be "too low" to revive the species, Save the Rhino International CEO Jo Shaw told AFP. It is likely too late for northern rhinos, she said, and the focus should be on the Javan and Sumatran subspecies, which each have fewer than 50 surviving. The northern white researchers maintain the techniques they are developing will help all rhinos, as well as other species. BioRescue's work is already contributing to saving the Sumatran rhino, Stejskal said. Back in the Ol Pejeta enclosure, Najin and Fatu's main handler Zacharia Mutai argued it was humans who poached northern whites to the edge of extinction, so it is our responsibility to bring them back. Mutai, who was there when Sudan died, said the birth of a new baby would be a cause for "world celebration". "And I will be looking after the baby," he said with a smile, as Fatu and Najin kept on munching behind him. dl/er/rlp/jxb

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