Environment ministers from the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding ‘which will allow for the translocation of six black rhino from South Africa to Chad,’ said a government statement.
The last time a rhino was spotted in Chad was in 1972, according to official documents Chad submitted to South Africa.
South Africa and Chad on Sunday signed an agreement that will see the re-introduction next year of critically endangered black rhino to the central African country, decades after it was last seen there.
There are around 5,000 black rhino left in Africa with South Africa’s population sitting at 1,893, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Pictured is a black rhino
THREATS FACED BY BLACK RHINOS
According to the IUCN, black rhinos face a variety of threats, but the main threat is poaching for the international rhino horn trade.
Rhino horn has two main uses, traditional (and more recently new non-traditional) use in Chinese medicine, and ornamental use (for example, rhino horn is used for making carved handles for ceremonial daggers in some Middle East countries).
In recent years that has been an increase in prices for rhino horn, which has coincided with an increase in poaching in some areas.
This increase has coincided with newuse of rhino horn to supposedly treat cancer ( a non-traditional use) and one for which there is no supporting evidence of its effectiveness.
The animals should be airlifted to Chad’s Zakouma National Park ‘sometime next year.’
‘We are looking at around March, April or May,’ environmental affairs ministry spokesman Albi Modise told AFP.
Black rhino are officially listed as critically endangered but are still native to the mainly eastern and southern African countries of Angola, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.
They have been re-introduced to several other southern African countries.
There are around 5,000 black rhino left in Africa with South Africa’s population sitting at 1,893, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
South Africa is also home to around 20,000 white rhinos, about 80 percent of the worldwide population, but the country has suffered record poaching in recent years.
Poachers have killed more than 7,100 rhinos in Africa over the past decade for their horns.
The horn is highly prized in China and Vietnam where it is coveted as a traditional medicine and aphrodisiac.
Sir David Attenborough with a three month old blind black rhino at Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, Kenya. Black rhino are critically endangered but are still native to eastern and southern African such as Angola, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe
South Africa’s Environment Minister Edna Molewa and Chad counterpart Ahmat Mbodou Mahamat signed Sunday’s deal in Pretoria.
According to the IUCN, black rhinos face a variety of threats, but the main threat is poaching for the international rhino horn trade.
Rhino horn has two main usesL traditional (and more recently new non-traditional) use in Chinese medicine, and ornamental use (for example, rhino horn is used for making carved handles for ceremonial daggers in some Middle East countries).