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Also known as the square-lipped rhinoceros, white rhinos have a square upper lip with almost no hair. One day we hope to see this species saved through successful births of northern white rhino calves at the Nikita Kahn Rhino Rescue Center.White rhinos are the second-largest land mammal and their name comes from the Afrikaan’s, a West Germanic language, word “weit” which means wide and refers to the animal’s mouth. The 12 northern white rhino cell lines in the Frozen Zoo® will be used to develop stem cells to create northern white rhino sperm and oocytes for the generation of embryos. Meanwhile, our Conservation Genetics team is analyzing whole genome sequences of nine northern white rhinos and four southern white rhinos.
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Researchers in our Reproductive Sciences team are developing assisted reproductive technologies, including artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization, and embryo transfer, using southern white rhinos as a model species that may one day serve a surrogate mother role. With so few animals remaining, saving the northern white rhino will require cutting-edge science and the resources of the Frozen Zoo®. Consistent with our vision to lead the fight against extinction, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance has made an organization-wide commitment to rescue the northern white rhino from the brink of extinction. There are only two northern white rhinos remaining in the world. With funding assistance from the San Diego Zoo, the International Rhino Foundation works to protect vulnerable white rhino populations in South Africa, while also helping to develop new methods to combat and reduce poaching. San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance has a long partnership with the International Rhino Foundation as a member of their Zoo Partners Program. Together with our partners, we are committed to enhancing the survival of rhinos in the wilderness. Currently, efforts are underway in collaboration with our Nutritional Services Department to formulate improved diets for white rhinos in zoos that will maintain their reproductive health. They have discovered that a significant portion of rhino diets contain estrogen-mimicking compounds that have the potential to alter reproductive development and contribute to diminished breeding success. More recently, our Reproductive Sciences researchers have assessed current and historic diets for zoo-housed rhinos in relation to decreased reproduction. Our Recovery Ecology scientists have ruled out behavioral differences between wild and zoo-born females as a probable cause. San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance conservation workers have been working on this problem for decades. As poaching reaches unprecedented levels, a healthy, productive zoo population of white rhinos that can serve as a safety net against extinction has never been more important.
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However, the zoo population is no longer self-sustaining due to limited reproduction in females born at our institution and others across the globe. With over 90 calves born at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, we are the world’s leader in white rhino breeding. Toward a Sustainable Assurance Population Conservation Status: Southern white rhino, IUCN Red List - Near Threatened Northern white rhino, IUCN Red List - Critically Endangered