Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

After 40 years of extinction, rhinos return to Mozambique

SISIPHO SKWEYIYA

OVER four decades after they became extinct locally, rhinos are roaming again the wilds of Mozambique, which is bringing the endangered species from South Africa in efforts to breathe new life into its parks and boost local tourism.

A group of rangers captured, sedated and moved black and white rhinos over 1,000 miles (1,610 km) to Mozambique’s Zinave National Park, which has over 400,000 hectares and more than 2,300 other reintroduced animals.

“Rhinos are important to the ecosystem, which is one of the reasons why we’re moving them all this distance and doing all this effort to get them there,” Kester Vickery, a conservationist who is supervising the rhino translocation told Reuters.

Advertisements

The Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) conservation group, which is conducting the operation, aims to relocate over 40 rhinos in the next two years to Mozambique.

Its project manager, Anthony Alexander, said that the group has already brought in certain predators and many elephants to the park and that it was now the rhinos’ turn.

“It’s very exciting now to complete the presence of historical species in the park,” Alexander said.

This initiative is a part of a campaign to save the endangered species by relocating them to safe havens where they have a chance to increase their population.

“We are effectively spreading our eggs and putting them in different baskets,” Vickery said, adding that he hoped to see a thriving population of white rhinos in Zinave in 10 years.

READ:  Mozambique switches focus to Privinvest in 'tuna bond' case

Mozambican Environment Minister Ivete Maibaze said in a statement that this historic translocation will also be beneficial for the country’s emerging eco-tourism industry.

Mozambique’s wildlife numbers were badly hit by a 15-year civil war that ended in 1992, and by poaching.

Advertisements
By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION