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The Rhisotope Project, supported by the IAEA, is safely inserting radioactive isotopes into rhino horns to deter poachers and stop smuggling by making the horns detectable at international borders.
We are sharing with you today perhaps the saddest wildlife video we’ve uncovered. In a YouTube video from The Telegraph, a ...
Most rhino poaching happens in South Africa's state-owned game parks. During the first half of 2021, rhino poaching in the country rose by 50% compared to a year earlier when poaching plummeted ...
Africa’s Rhino population has been under extreme pressure -- decimated by factors such as poaching, driven by illegal ivory trade, and habitat loss. According to the Worldwide Fund for Nature ...
Even a pride of lions knows better than to attack a fully grown rhino. In a video from Maasai Sightings filmed in Nairobi National Park, we can see how a mother rhino defends her baby against hungry ...
African rhino populations are increasing despite poaching and habitat loss, new figures from the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) show. The new figures, released Thursday ...
A herd of 2,000 rhinoceroses urgently in need of a new owner has finally found one: The rhinos and the farm where they live in South Africa have been purchased by a conservation group that plans ...
By making rhino horns detectable and traceable, the Rhisotope Project aims to create a powerful deterrent for traffickers.