Killing demand is the only way to curb the poaching, experts say, but given current rhino death rates any such action must be urgent
At the end of the 19th century, a group of 20-50 southern white rhinoceros were discovered in the Umfolozi-Hluhluwe region of South Africa. The species had been thought lost to the guns and trophy rooms of colonial hunters. Today their population is more than 20,000.
The programme that brought the species back from the scrapheap of extinction is considered to be one of conservation’s great success stories. But a massive surge in poaching threatens to undo more than a century of careful protection and management.
The South African government reported on Thursday that poachers killed 1,215 southern white rhinos in 2014 - 200 more than the year before and 1,202 more than in 2007.
The southern white rhino is the world’s only rhino species not considered threatened by the International Union of the Conservation of Nature. Before 2010, the population was increasing by 4.5% each year. But by 2012, poaching had slowed the growth rate to just 0.7%. Southern white rhino numbers may now be declining for the first time in a century.
Poaching is driven by the growing market for rhino horn in ever-more affluent East Asia. The horn is primarily made out of a material similar to keratin – the stuff that makes up hair and fingernails. It has been used in traditional Asian medicine for centuries. The now mostly extinct or endangered Asian rhino species were hunted because of a misbelief their horn could treat fever and cerebrovascular disease.
In recent years rhino horn has been endowed with further fantastical properties that treat cancer and cure hangovers. The common notion that rhino horn is used as an aphrodisiac in Asia is derogatory and untrue, according to wildlife trade observers Traffic. However, a recent survey that found evidence the belief was prevalent in Chinese societ
A man shows off a piece of rhino horn in HanSTR/AFP/Getty Images
Rhino horn has also become a ‘Veblen good’ says Daniel Stiles, an independent wildlife trafficking consultant who works with various anti-poaching NGOs and the UN. This is a commodity that grows more desirable the more expensive it becomes. One kilo of rhino horn can cost up to £45,000.
“The horn is now also being made into bangles and other status ornaments for the wealthy to show off with,” he says.
Nothing will curb poaching while the payoffs remain so high, says Stiles. “There is only one solution, kill demand. Convince consumers that rhino horn has no medicinal value whatsoever.” He says the use of horn as a status symbol “needs to be attacked forcibly by creating stigma, as with fur coats in the west”.
Public education is the key tool available to combat the traffickers’ business model, says Davin O’Regan, a wildlife trafficking expert at the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies. In a survey of Chinese people by Wild Aid in 2014, two thirds of respondents thought rhino horn was obtained legally from rhinos that had died naturally or been farmed. Half did not realise it was illegal to purchase horn in China.
“After I heard that there is no difference between a rhino horn and a human fingernail in nature, I think it might have no especially great medicinal value,” a Beijing woman told the survey.
A giant poster encourages people to stop using rhino horn, in Hanoi.Photograph: Kham/Reuters
O’Regan says this shows the scope for public education in the East: “There is a lot of room for addressing these information gaps and legal misunderstandings, which should put a dent in rhino horn demand, its price, and eventually its supply via poaching. Given the current pace of poaching, however, such action must be urgent.”