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The number of critically endangered black rhinos has increased slightly, but there is bad news for other rhino species.
A South African university has launched an anti-poaching campaign to inject the horns of rhinos with radioactive isotopes ...
South Africa’s New Weapon Against Poachers | Vantage with Palki Sharma South Africa is taking a bold step to stop rhino ...
South African scientists have launched an anti-poaching campaign in which rhino's horns will be injected with a radioactive ...
The process is safe and harmless to the animals, but will allow authorities to detect smuggled horns as they're transported ...
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Good Good Good on MSNSouth Africa has a new way to halt illegal poaching: Radioactive rhino hornsIn Mokopane, South Africa, researchers at the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg have launched the Rhisotope Project, ...
Scientists have developed a safe way to embed radioactive markers in rhino horns, making them detectable and help combat ...
South Africa has the largest rhino population in the world and hundreds of rhinos are poached every year.According to BBC, horns of African rhinos are exported to Asian markets where consumers ...
The IAEA is supporting South Africa’s Rhisotope Project which uses radioactive tagging in rhino horns to combat illegal ...
South African National Parks, which runs some of the world’s premier wildlife reserves, said it’s in discussions with Rand Merchant Bank over the sale of bonds to fund conservation including boosting ...
It costs about $1,500 to move a single rhino by land within South Africa; $5,500 per rhino for land transport to neighboring nations; and $50,000 per rhino for air transport to African countries ...
Rhinos have long been a symbol of Africa’s wild beauty. But now, science is stepping in to protect them in a new way. A team ...
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