Could Texas Become Safe Haven for Rhinos?

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It is the most valuable wildlife commodity in the world.

Fetching up to $60,000 a pound on the black market, the rhinoceros horn is coveted greatly by millionaires in Asia who use it as a status symbol or grind into traditional elixirs as a aphrodisiac.

By comparison ivory from poached elephant tusks are going for about $1,500 a pound. That’s chump change compared to rhino horn.

Large-scale poaching of the now critically endangered black rhino resulted in a dramatic 96 decline from 70,000 individuals in 1970 to just 2,410 in 1995 according to Save the Rhino, a strictly rhinoceros-based conservation organization.

“Thanks to the persistent efforts of conservation programs across Africa, black rhino numbers have risen since then to a current population of between 5,042 and 5,458 individuals.”

 

“The overwhelming rhino conservation success story is that of the Southern white rhino. With numbers as low as 50-100 left in the wild in the early 1900s, this sub-species of rhino has now increased to between 19,666 and 21,085.”

Photo Courtesy Wiki Commons (John 5199)

But poaching has increased dramatically.

In 2007 there were 13 rhinos poached in South Africa. That number skyrocketed to 83 the next year and by 2015 there were 1,175 rhinos poached. That means one out of every five rhinos was killed drive by the aforementioned Asian market.

There is no end in site to the killing. Despite the use of surveillance drones, shoot to kill policies on poachers in some area and increase awareness, poachers are hitting rhinos and they are hitting them hard.

Some believe the solution to saving the species involves bringing them to Texas.

Hundreds of orphaned baby rhinos could be moved into Texas where they could be kept far away from poachers on highly managed private ranches. The thought process is the gene pool could be preserved while conservationists figure out what to do with the problems in Africa.

Byron and Sandra Salder, owners of YO Headquarters near Mountain Home have spoken to officials about offering their large ranch as a safe haven for rhinoceros.

“It’s a tragedy what is happening to the rhinoceros and we want to be involved in any way we can to help out this iconic species,” Salder said.

Byron was the first U.S.A. bowhunter to receive SCI’s World Conservation and Hunting Award. In 2008 the Houston Safari Club introduced a new award titled the Byron G. Sadler Bow Hunting Achievement Award and Byron was the first recipient.

“This is a species we might have an opportunity to save and I know the hunting conservationists of Texas will certainly get behind it,” he said.

The Texas-based Exotic Wildlife Association (EWA) is in the process of working out the details of an arrangement with South African ranchers, which may culminate in the relocation of white rhino to the U.S. where the rhinos would find safe haven, in the wild through their Second Ark Foundation.

In 2015 they held a rhinoceros summit dedicated to their “Rhino 1000” project and are currently working on the massive red tape and fundraising it will take to bring these orphaned rhinos to Texas. Other individuals and organizations like Dallas Safari Club, Houston Safari Club and Safari Club International are working on different aspects of saving the rhino.

At this point it seems as if the project is stalled but there is hope that one day Texas could be a safe haven for one of the planet’s most iconic animals.

Chester Moore, Jr.

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