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Will current conservation responses save the Critically Endangered Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2015

Rasmus Gren Havmøller
Affiliation:
Natural History Museum of Denmark, Centre for Macroecology, Evolution & Climate, Copenhagen, Denmark
Junaidi Payne
Affiliation:
Borneo Rhino Alliance (BORA), Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia
Widodo Ramono
Affiliation:
Yayasan Badak Indonesia, Bogor, Java, Indonesia
Susie Ellis
Affiliation:
International Rhino Foundation, Strasburg, Virginia, USA
K. Yoganand
Affiliation:
WWF–Malaysia, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia
Barney Long
Affiliation:
WWF, Washington, DC, USA
Eric Dinerstein
Affiliation:
WWF, Washington, DC, USA
A. Christy Williams
Affiliation:
WWF–International, Gland, Switzerland
Rudi H. Putra
Affiliation:
Leuser Conservation Forum, Banda Aceh, Aceh, Indonesia
Jamal Gawi
Affiliation:
Leuser International Foundation, Banda Aceh, Aceh, Indonesia
Bibhab Kumar Talukdar
Affiliation:
IUCN Species Survival Commission Asian Rhino Specialist Group, Guwahati, Assam, India
Neil Burgess
Affiliation:
United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre, Cambridge, UK
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Abstract

The Critically Endangered Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis formerly ranged across South-east Asia. Hunting and habitat loss have made it one of the rarest large mammals and the species faces extinction despite decades of conservation efforts. The number of individuals remaining is unknown as a consequence of inadequate methods and lack of funds for the intensive field work required to estimate the population size of this rare and solitary species. However, all information indicates that numbers are low and declining. A few individuals persist in Borneo, and three tiny populations remain on the Indonesian island of Sumatra and show evidence of breeding. Rhino Protection Units are deployed at all known breeding sites but poaching and a presumed low breeding rate remain major threats. Protected areas have been created for the rhinoceros and other in situ conservation efforts have increased but the species has continued to go locally extinct across its range. Conventional captive breeding has also proven difficult; from a total of 45 Sumatran rhinoceros taken from the wild since 1984 there were no captive births until 2001. Since then only two pairs have been actively bred in captivity, resulting in four births, three by the same pair at the Cincinnati Zoo and one at the Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary in Sumatra, with the sex ratio skewed towards males. To avoid extinction it will be necessary to implement intensive management zones, manage the metapopulation as a single unit, and develop advanced reproductive techniques as a matter of urgency. Intensive census efforts are ongoing in Bukit Barisan Selatan but elsewhere similar efforts remain at the planning stage.

Information

Type
Short Communications
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2015 
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Historical and present distribution of the Sumatran rhinoceros Dicerorhinus sumatrensis in South-east Asia. The historical distribution is derived from range maps in Foose & van Strien (1997), and the current distribution from IUCN (2012).