SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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Toko
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SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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Good news for rhinos: SANParks today announced a partnership with the Peace Parks Parks Foundation which will see R2.4-million allocated to the care of rhinos that have been injured and orphaned by poaching.
In 2014 alone, SANParks rescued 16 rhino orphans. 12 went to specialist care and 4 were placed with surrogate mothers in holding bomas managed by SANParks.
The ultimate aim, says SANParks, is for the rhino orphans to be integrated back into normally functioning breeding populations.
from FB
Oxpeckers Investigative Environmental Journalism



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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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Good News...but Peace Parks have been burned before...we must watch this one regarding money spent! O-/

Still, most orphans went to Care For Wild, our local erstwhile partner where Timbi lives! \O


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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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http://www.sabreakingnews.co.za/2015/03 ... programme/

A total of R2.4 million has been allocated to the Rhino Protection Programme (RPP), which assists with the care of injured and orphaned rhino as a result of poaching.

The allocation will be done by the South African National Parks (SANParks) in partnership with the Peace Parks Foundation (PPF).

“We appreciate the support of the RPP in helping rhinos that have been injured and orphaned as a result of poaching and supporting our teams of vets and field staff, who brave the frontlines of the rhino poaching war every day.

“These interventions form a critical component of the strategic integrated approach to combatting wildlife crime as announced by the Minister of Environmental Affairs last year,” SANParks CEO Fundisile Mketeni said.

RPP is collaboration between the Department of Environmental Affairs, SANParks, Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife (Ezemvelo) and the Peace Parks Foundation (PPF).

The programme is funded by the Dutch and Swedish postcode lotteries and other private donors including The Sophia Foundation as well as the UK-based fundraising initiative, The Charge.

Last year, SANParks rescued 16 rhino orphans from the Kruger National Park. Twelve of the rescued rhinos received specialist care and four were placed with surrogate mothers in holding bomas managed by SANParks.

“The ultimate aim is for the rhino orphans to be integrated back into a normally functioning, breeding population,” SANParks spokesperson Lise-Marie Greeff-Villet said.

In circumstances where the mothers of the rhino have been killed by poachers, they will require specialist care as they are generally weak and dehydrated.

“Once the rhino orphans have recovered and are grazing, and have been integrated with older rhino, they will be moved to rhino strongholds where they will form part of the breeding population,” Greeff-Villet said.

Specialist veterinary treatment will also be provided for wounded rhinos. – SAnews.gov.za


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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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From FB South African National Parks
PROGRAMME FOR CARE OF INJURED AND ORPHANED RHINO
The South African National Parks (SANParks) has announced a partnership with the Peace Parks Parks Foundation (PPF) as part of the Rhino Protection Programme (RPP) which will see R2.4-million allocated towards assisting with the care of rhino which have been injured and orphaned as a result of rhino poaching. The Kruger National Park has been particularly affected by rhino poaching and in the course of 2014 SANParks rescued 16 rhino orphans, of which 12 went to specialist care and 4 were placed with surrogate mothers in holding bomas managed by SANParks.
The ultimate aim is for the rhino orphans to be integrated back into a normally functioning breeding population. The rhino orphans that are rescued in circumstances where their mothers have been killed by poachers require specialist care as they are generally weak and dehydrated. With the nurturing cycle broken, human intervention is essential to support the rehabilitation of orphaned rhino. Once the rhino orphans have recovered and are grazing, and have been integrated with older rhino, they will be moved to rhino strongholds where they will form part of the breeding population.
Veterinarians and rangers are also regularly confronted with dealing with wounded adult rhino in the Kruger National Park following poaching incidents. Unfortunately many wounded rhino have such severe wounds that they have to be humanely euthanized. If there is a chance, however, that the rhino will recover, then specialist veterinary treatment will be administered, and the rhino released with a tracking collar in order that the rhino can be monitored and follow up treatment administered.
According to Mr Fundisile Mketeni, CEO of SANParks, “We appreciate the support of the Rhino Protection Programme in helping rhinos that have been injured and orphaned as a result of poaching, and supporting our teams of vets and field staff who brave the frontlines of the rhino poaching war every day. These interventions form a critical component of the strategic integrated approach to combatting wildlife crime as announced by the Minister of Environmental Affairs last year.”
The Rhino Protection Programme (RPP) - a collaboration between the Department of Environmental Affairs, South African National Parks, Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife (Ezemvelo) and Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) - is funded by the Dutch and Swedish postcode lotteries and other private donors which include The Sophia Foundation as well as the UK-based fundraising initiative, The Charge.
ENDS
Released by SANParks Corporate Communications
For further information contact:
Lise-Marie Greeff-Villet
Communications Coordinator
Peace Parks Foundation
Tel:+27 (0)21 880 5125
Email: lgreeff-villet@ppf.org.za
Paul Daphne
Head of Communications
SANParks
Tel: 012 426 5072
Cell: 082 806 5409
Email: paul.daphne@sanparks.org


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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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http://www.peaceparks.org/news.php?pid=1481&mid=1486

HELPING INJURED AND ORPHANED RHINO SURVIVE THEIR POACHING ORDEAL
11 MARCH 2015

The Rhino Protection Programme (RPP) partners have allocated a combined R3.8 million ($311 000) in funding to bolster the efforts of the wildlife veterinary teams from both Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife (Ezemvelo) and Kruger National Park (KNP). The projects supported by the RPP have already started and focus on the treatment, rehabilitation and eventual reintroduction of injured adult rhino; and the recovery, nurturing and reintroduction of orphaned rhino.

The Rhino Protection Programme is a collaboration between the Department of Environmental Affairs, South Africa National Parks (SANParks), Ezemvelo and Peace Parks Foundation. The RPP’s investment is made possible through funding from the Dutch and Swedish postcode lotteries and other private donors that include The Sophia Foundation and the UK-based fundraising initiative, The Charge.

Mr Werner Myburgh, CEO of Peace Parks Foundation, lauded these donors for recognising the importance of supporting and developing veterinary care as an integral component of the battle to save the rhino: “Amidst the overwhelming focus placed on other critical anti-poaching interventions, the crucial role that wildlife veterinary teams play and the support they need are often overlooked and underestimated by the general public. These teams work quietly beside conservationists and security forces at the frontlines of the rhino poaching war every day – not only providing medical treatment to injured rhino, and nurturing those young rhino orphans who hold the future of the rhino population in their DNA, but also collecting and processing forensic medical evidence that play a vital role in the apprehension and conviction of those who perpetrate wildlife crimes.”

KNP and Ezemvelo each hold their own significance with regard to rhino protection, with KNP currently home to the largest remaining population of rhino, and KwaZulu-Natal being the region that possesses the rhino population with the farthest reaching genetic pool. These areas also pose many challenges to their resident veterinary teams, who are faced with traversing a vast expanse of protected area in order to find and reach injured and orphaned rhino.

The teams treating injured rhino need the resources and equipment to, as quickly as possible, travel to multiple crime scenes in one day, and be able to treat a wide range of increasingly severe injuries. Furthermore, additional adequately trained manpower such as assistant vets are desperately needed. Many traditionally trained wildlife vets have not been equipped to deal with the types of injuries rhino sustain from poaching incidents, or the requirements of criminal scene analyses.

The veterinary teams also include veterinary nurses, caregivers and rangers stationed at rehabilitation bomas to care for and protect the injured and orphaned rhino.

Due to rhino's sensitivity to captivity and human interference, the veterinary teams, as far as possible, try to treat and keep injured adult rhino in their natural habitat. When it comes to rhino orphans however, the nurturing cycle is broken and human intervention is essential to support rehabilitation. At the baby bomas, every rescued orphan receives the required medical attention, food, exercise, physical comfort and company - requiring staff to be on hand to provide round-the-clock care. Once the young rhino are able to fend for themselves, they are moved to secured rhino strongholds where their progress and integration into the wild is closely monitored and protected.

With support from the Rhino Protection Programme, Ezemvelo and KNP will be able to invest in the necessary human resources, vehicles, equipment, training and infrastructure as required to ensure the long-term impact and efficacy of the veterinary teams who spend their days fighting for the future of the African rhino.


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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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When it comes to rhino orphans however, the nurturing cycle is broken and human intervention is essential to support rehabilitation. At the baby bomas, every rescued orphan receives the required medical attention, food, exercise, physical comfort and company - requiring staff to be on hand to provide round-the-clock care.

This approach is disagreed with by some, as regards the degree of habituation to humans that develops... O-/


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Re: SANParks' Orphaned and Injured Rhinos

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From Twitter today: https://twitter.com/BEMolewa
Edna Molewa @BEMolewa · 10 Std. Vor 10 Stunden
In the course of 2014 @SANParks rescued 16 rhino orphans, 12 went to specialist care, 4 placed with surrogate mothers in holding bomas


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