Defending the Rhino
As demand for rhino horn soars, police and conservationists in South Africa pit technology against increasingly sophisticated poachers
- By Richard Conniff
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
So Flamand has been working with KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Wildlife, the provincial park service, to cajole landowners into a novel partnership: If they agree to open up their land and meet stringent security requirements, KZN will introduce a founding population of black rhinos and split ownership of the offspring. In one case, 19 neighbors pulled down the fences dividing their properties and built a perimeter fence to thwart poachers. “Security has to be good,” said Flamand. “We need to know if the field rangers are competent, how they are equipped, how organized, how distributed, whether they are properly trained.” Over the past six years, the range for black rhinos in KwaZulu-Natal has increased by a third, all on private or community-owned land, he said, allowing the addition of 98 animals in six new populations.
Conservationists have had to think more carefully about which animals to move, and how to move them. In the past, parks sometimes transferred surplus males without bothering to include potential mates, and many died. But moving mother-calf pairs was perilous, too; more than half the calves died, according to Wayne Linklater, a wildlife biologist at New Zealand’s Victoria University and lead author of a new study on black rhino translocations. Catching pregnant females also created problems. The distress caused by capture led to some miscarriages, and the emphasis on moving numerous young females may also have depleted the literal motherlode—the breeding population protected within Hluhluwe-iMfolozi. “We were left with a whole lot of grannies in the population, and not enough breeding females,” said park ecologist David Druce.
Researchers have now come to recognize that understanding the social nature of black rhinos is the key to getting them established, and reproducing, in new habitats. A territorial bull will tolerate a number of females and some adolescent males in his neighborhood. So translocations now typically start with one bull per water source, with females and younger males released nearby. To keep territorial bulls separated during the crucial settling process, researchers have experimented with distributing rhino scent strategically around the new habitat, creating “virtual neighbors.” Using a bull’s own dung didn’t work. (They are at least bright enough, one researcher suggests, to think: “That’s my dung. But I’ve never been here before.”) It may be possible to use dung from other rhinos to mark a habitat as suitable and also convey that wandering into neighboring territories could be risky.
The release process itself has also changed. In the macho game capture culture of the past, it was like a rodeo: A lot of vehicles gathered around to watch. Then someone opened the crate and the rhino came busting out, like a bull entering an arena. Sometimes it panicked and ran till it hit a fence. Other times it charged the vehicles, often as documentary cameras rolled. “It was good for television, but not so good for animals,” said Flamand. Game capture staff now practice “soft releases.” The rhino is sedated in its crate, and all the vehicles move away. Someone administers an antidote and backs away, leaving the rhino to wander out and explore its new neighborhood at leisure. “It’s very calm. It’s boring, which is fine.”
These new rhino habitats are like safe houses, and because of the renewed threat of poaching, they are high-tech safe houses at that. Caretakers often notch an animal’s ear to make it easier to identify, implant a microchip in its horn for radio frequency identification, camera-trap it, register it in a genetic database and otherwise monitor it by every available means short of a breathalyzer.
Early this year, Somkhanda Game Reserve, an hour or so up the road from Hluhluwe-iMfolozi, installed a system that requires implanting a GPS device the size of D-cell batteries in the horn of every rhino on the property. Receivers mounted on utility poles register not just an animal’s exact location but also every movement of its head, up and down, back and forth, side to side.
A movement that deviates suspiciously from the norm causes an alarm to pop up on a screen at a security company, and the company relays the animal’s location to field rangers back at Somkhanda. “It’s a heavy capital outlay,” said Simon Morgan of Wildlife ACT, which works with conservation groups on wildlife monitoring, “but when you look at the cost of rhinos, it’s worth it. We have made it publicly known that these devices are out there. At this stage, that’s enough to make poachers go elsewhere.”
A few months after the Vietnamese courier went to prison, police conducted a series of raids in Limpopo Province. Frightened by continued rhino poaching on their land, angry farmers had tipped off investigators to a helicopter they had seen flying low over their properties. Police traced the chopper and arrested Dawie Groenewald, a former police officer, and his wife, Sariette, who operated trophy hunting safaris and ran a game farm in the area. They were charged with being kingpins in a criminal ring that profited from contraband rhino horns and also with poaching rhinos on their neighbors’ game farms. But what shocked the community was the allegation that two local veterinarians, people they had trusted to care for their animals, had been helping to kill them instead. Rising prices for rhino horn, and the prospect of instant wealth, had apparently shattered a lifetime of ethical constraints.
Conservationists were shocked, too. One of the veterinarians had been a go-between for the Groenewalds when they purchased 36 rhinos from Kruger National Park in 2009. Investigators later turned up a mass grave with 20 rhino carcasses on the Groenewald farm. Hundreds of rhinos were allegedly killed by the conspirators. Thirteen people have been charged in the case so far, and the trial is scheduled for spring of 2012. In the meantime, Groenewald has received several new permits for hunting white rhinos.
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Related topics: Mammals Hunting South Africa
Additional Sources
“Guidelines for large herbivore translocation simplified: black rhinoceros case study,” Wayne L. Linklater et al., Journal of Applied Ecology, April 2011









Comments (8)
Defending the rhino will be like turning back the tide as South Africa continues to devolve. However these heroic efforts should not be abandoned.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on February 4,2012 | 01:11 AM
Thank you for this in-depth article on the rhino's situation. It's spreading awareness and inspiring folks to take action that will surely help save this gentle beast... it sure got me involved!
Posted by Wildlife Margrit on December 22,2011 | 11:03 AM
Thank you for a timely and much needed article concerning rhino poaching in Africa. It is a pitiful reflection on our species that these oldest of mammals could become extinct due to our superstitions and blind ignorance in what we think/wish/hope a horn of keratin can do. And for South Africa to issue new hunting permits to Dawie Groenewald, one is tempted to believe there are more than the currently arrested 13 suspects in this horrif case. I look at Africa and I see human greed in a mad race to see which goes extinct first: the elephant or the rhino. Neither is acceptable to me; either is an unconscionable sin committed against nature and the world my, and your, grandchildren deserve to inherit.
Posted by Linda Reifschneider on November 28,2011 | 06:07 PM
Also a reason why humans are worthless too.
Posted by Guest on November 13,2011 | 12:57 PM
Isn't it possible to amputate the rhino horns at a safe point to make killing them valueless? Then the horns can be sold.
Posted by Moiraz on November 9,2011 | 09:56 PM
I enjoyed this article. I had the opportunity to dart hunt a black rhino in 2005 in the same province. Was glad to see it taken care of by a Vet, and then let go to roam. These animals are so facinating.
Posted by Colleen on November 5,2011 | 07:45 PM
we have to keep our rhino's safe.
Posted by carol watson on October 22,2011 | 07:10 PM
We are all from the same place, God took the dirt from the ground and made humans just like he did with aniamls, so why are some of us so cruel and others are so caring?
Posted by Ruth on October 20,2011 | 01:01 PM