Herd of 2,000 African rhinos get a last-minute purchase and rewilding ‘lifeline’

Authored by dailymaverick.co.za and submitted by NatsuDragnee1

Several of the 2,000 white rhino that will be rewilded over the next 10 years. (Photo: Brent Stirton)

Africa’s beleaguered rhinos have been thrown a significant lifeline with the announcement that nearly 2,000 semi-wild rhinos owned by South African rhino breeder John Hume will be “rewilded” into reserves across South Africa and other parts of the continent over the next 10 years.

African Parks, a private Johannesburg-based conservation NGO that manages 22 protected areas in partnership with 12 governments across Africa, confirmed on Monday, 4 September that it had “stepped in as the new owner of the world’s largest private captive rhino breeding operation”, the Platinum Rhino project, a 7,800-hectare property in North West.

The project was started by Hume, a wealthy property developer turned wildlife rancher who has earned both opprobrium and praise for his decades-old initiative to breed rhinos, harvest their horns without harming them physically and then sell the horns to buyers in the Far East.

Read more in Daily Maverick: With 2,000 rhinos up for sale but few takers, it’s time for an urgent rethink

However, with no indication that the majority of member states of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) are willing to overturn the 1974 international ban on the trade in rhino horns, Hume announced earlier this year that he had run out of funds to keep his project going and was offering them for sale via an online auction.

But by all accounts, very few bidders showed any interest, casting the future security and welfare of the about 2000 rhinos into jeopardy.

Read more in Daily Maverick: John Hume’s Platinum Rhino project has no viable business model – that bodes ill for big critter conservation

That changed on Monday, 4 August when African Parks CEO Peter Fearnhead confirmed in a statement that his organisation had agreed to purchase the Platinum Rhino farm and all its rhinos – with the endorsement of the South African Government and the African Rhino Specialist Group of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Dr Mike Knight, chairman of the IUCN specialist group, told Daily Maverick on Monday he regarded African Parks as a credible and responsible conservation organisation and was optimistic that the animals could be successfully rewilded.

“The key thing will be finding conservation areas that are large enough and secure from poaching… The conservation sector is delighted that African Parks can provide a credible solution for this important population, and a significant lifeline for this Near Threatened species.”

African Parks – without disclosing any of the financial arrangements of the deal – said it had agreed to purchase the farm and all 2,000 southern white rhino with one clear objective: “To rewild these rhino over the next 10 years to well-managed and secure areas, establishing or supplementing strategic populations, thereby de-risking the future of the species”.

The opening bid for the rhinos at auction was set at $10-million (R182-million) though Hume was reportedly claimed to have spent $150-million on rhino breeding over the past 30 years.

Following the deal with African Parks, Hume’s breeding programme, based in North West, will be phased out and the project will end once all the rhinos are released into the wild.

“This is one of the largest continent-wide rewilding endeavours to occur for any species,” the NGO said, noting that Hume’s captive-bred rhinos represented nearly 15% of the world’s remaining wild rhino population.

“As a result of financial stress, Platinum Rhino was put up for auction on the 26th of April 2023, but did not receive any bids, putting these rhinos at serious risk of poaching and fragmentation.

“Given African Parks’ experience in effectively managing protected areas and carrying out wildlife translocations at scale, including bringing rhino back to Rwanda, Malawi and Democratic Republic of the Congo, African Parks was approached by numerous concerned individuals from the conservation sector to provide a solution to prevent a potential conservation crisis, and to help secure the future for a species in decline.

“After conducting a thorough due diligence and with the support of the South African government, as well as having secured emergency funding to make the transaction possible, African Parks agreed to purchase the farm and all 2,000 rhinos.

“African Parks had no intention of being the owner of a captive rhino breeding operation with 2,000 rhinos. However, we fully recognise the moral imperative of finding a solution for these animals, so that they can once again play their integral role in fully functioning ecosystems,” said Fearnhead.

“The scale of this undertaking is simply enormous, and therefore daunting. However, it is equally one of the most exciting and globally strategic conservation opportunities. We will be working with multiple governments, funding partners and conservation organisations, who are committed to making this rewilding vision a reality.”

Dr Richard Emslie, a Pietermaritzburg-based rhino conservation expert, told Daily Maverick he was confident that the mostly captive-bred rhinos could be “rewilded very easily”.

“I would call them ‘semi-wild’ rather than ‘semi-captive’. It’s interesting that some of John Hume’s black rhinos were sent to a property in Eswatini a few years ago – and within just a few months of their arrival one of the females had been mated by a wild rhino. So I strongly suspect his white rhinos will also do fine. Obviously, this will depend on where they are going.”

Emslie said he also believed that Hume deserved credit for building up such a large population and protecting them at his own expense at a time when other state-managed rhino populations had been decimated.

Barbara Creecy, the national Minister of Environmental Affairs is currently in Kenya for a climate change meeting and could not be reached for comment on Monday night.

However, African Parks quoted her in a media statement as congratulating both John Hume and African Parks for “reaching this important agreement which facilitates a conservation solution for the rhino currently in a captive facility”.

“Our Government is guided in our approach to conservation by the UN Convention on Biodiversity and our own white paper. In this regard we are ready to support African Parks and other partners with technical and scientific advice in developing a conservation solution that includes translocating the animals over a period of time to suitable parks and community conservancies in South Africa and on the African continent,” the statement said.

The white rhino as a species is under extreme pressure, especially in South Africa, because of poaching. White rhinos historically consisted of two subspecies: the southern white and the northern white. The northern white rhino is functionally extinct, with just two non-breeding females in captivity in Kenya.

Southern white rhino reached an all-time low of 30 to 40 animals in the 1930s, but through effective conservation measures, increased to about 20,000 individuals by 2012. However, with the dramatic rise in poaching for their horns for the illegal wildlife trade, their numbers have fallen to below 13,000 today. DM

anon6702 on September 5th, 2023 at 15:35 UTC »

How small was the initial rhino population on his farm? Like how inbred are they? And what are the consequences of letting 2000 inbred rhinos, breed with the wild population? I hope im just being negative and this is actually good news for the rhino population.

kerouacrimbaud on September 5th, 2023 at 13:47 UTC »

I know that rhino populations used to be quite large, but the image of 2,000 rhinos in a single location is hard to fathom.

Lord_Dolkhammer on September 5th, 2023 at 11:29 UTC »

What. A herd of 2000? Thought they were solitary animals.