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South Africa, home to the world’s largest rhino population, had lost over 10,000 rhinos to poaching over the last decade.
South African scientists have pioneered the Rhisotope Project, injecting rhino horns with radioactive isotopes to combat ...
The horns of rhinos are injected with radioactive isotopes that scientists say are harmless for the animals but can be detected by customs agents.
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Amazon S3 on MSNSee a Rare Black Rhino from Your Nairobi Airbnb StayAfrican safari and wildlife expert Rob the Ranger shares the unique experience of spotting a black rhino right from an Airbnb ...
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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, ...
We are sharing with you today perhaps the saddest wildlife video we’ve uncovered. In a YouTube video from The Telegraph, a ...
The Rhisotope Project, supported by the IAEA, is safely inserting radioactive isotopes into rhino horns to deter poachers and stop smuggling by making the horns detectable at international borders.
While conservation efforts have seen rhino populations in South Africa and other parts of their range begin to bounce back from the brink of extinction, poaching is still very much a problem. In 2024, ...
South African scientists have launched an anti-poaching campaign in which rhino's horns will be injected with a radioactive ...
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