Ol Pejeta Conservancy translocated to Ol Pejeta was living in a semiwild state. report about the last three individuals There are now only two northern white rhinos left in the world: • Najin, a female, was born in captivity in 1989. She is the mother of Fatu. Her mother was Nasima and her father was
Sudan. • Fatu, also a female, was born in captivity in 2000. They both belong to the
Dvůr Králové Zoo in the
Czech Republic, but live in
Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, Africa. They arrived at the conservancy after an air and road trip on 20 December 2009, along with two male northern white rhinos from the Dvůr Králové Zoo, Suni and Sudan. However, Suni, a male born at Dvůr Králové Zoo in 1980, died from natural causes in Ol Pejeta Conservancy in 2014. Sudan, caught from the wild in 1975, died on 19 March 2018. After the transport, the four rhinos were under constant watch by specialists and staff and lived in specially constructed
bomas with access to a paddock area, allowing them to acclimatize to their new surroundings. Ol Pejeta provides 24-hour armed security for the rhino enclosure. To prevent any unnecessary injuries they might inflict on each other while interacting in their fenced area, and give their horns an opportunity to regrow to a natural shape (as their front horns had grown bent by much rubbing against enclosure bars in captivity), all the rhinos were sedated and their horns were sawn off. This also made them less vulnerable to the
poaching that drove their species to near extinction, as the
horn is what the poachers are after. In place of their horns,
radio transmitters have been installed to allow closer monitoring of their whereabouts. They are protected round-the-clock by armed guards. Poachers have been selling their horns for $110,000 per kilogram ($50,000 per pound). Since May 2010, the northern white rhino male Sudan was moved from the initial holding pens to a much larger semiwild enclosure. There he roamed among many African animals, including several
southern white rhino females and many plains animals. On 26 October 2011, the females were coaxed into the larger enclosure. Until 2011, the progress of this attempt at saving the northern white rhinoceros was documented on the initiative's website; and their life in Ol Pejeta Conservancy is commented on the Conservancy's website. Several documentaries are in the works, including an episode of
Ol Pejeta Diaries titled "Return of the African Titans" for Oasis HD Canada in fall 2010, and a follow-up half-hour episode to follow. This translocation was also the subject of a special edition of the BBC's
Last Chance to See, titled "Return of the Rhino", presented by
Stephen Fry and the zoologist
Mark Carwardine. On 25 April 2012, and on 27 May 2012, Suni and Najin mated. Pregnancy of the female rhinos was monitored weekly. Rhinoceros
gestation takes 16 to 18 months, so in January 2014 the Conservancy considered Najin not pregnant, and a male southern white rhino from
Lewa Wildlife Conservancy was put to Najin and Fatu enclosure in Ol Pejeta to at least intercross the subspecies. To achieve this, both female northern white rhinos were separated from their male counterparts, which prevented them from producing a pure northern white rhino offspring. In 2015, however, tests conducted by Czech specialists revealed that neither of the females are "capable of natural reproduction". According to the director of the Dvůr Králové Zoo, it was possible Najin became pregnant but miscarried shortly thereafter, which resulted in pathological changes in her uterus, preventing another impregnation.
Assisted reproduction At the end of 2015, scientists from the
Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research,
San Diego Zoo Global,
Tiergarten Schönbrunn, and Dvůr Králové Zoo developed a plan to reproduce northern white rhinos using natural
gametes of the living rhinos and
induced pluripotent stem cells. Subsequently, in the future, it might be possible to specifically mature the cells into specific cells such as neurons and muscle cells, in a similar way in which
Katsuhiko Hayashi has grown mouse oocytes out of simple skin cells. The DNA of a dozen northern white rhinos has been preserved in genetic banks in Berlin and San Diego. In August 2019, ten egg cells (five from Najin and five from Fatu) were harvested to be
artificially inseminated with the
frozen sperm of a northern white rhino as part of a project by the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Dvůr Králové Zoo, Kenya Wildlife Service, and Avantea. In September 2019, scientists announced that they fertilized
in vitro the eggs with frozen sperm taken from dead males; two of the resulting
embryos were viable. In January 2020, it was announced that another embryo was created using the same techniques; all three embryos are from Fatu. These embryos are being stored in liquid nitrogen until they can be placed into a
surrogate mother, probably a
southern white rhino. In December 2020, 14 egg cells were retrieved from Fatu; eight of them were fertilised by the sperm of the dead northern white rhino Suni, resulting in two viable embryos. No egg cells were retrieved from Najin. , there are 38 northern white rhino embryos that have been created by BioRescue. The embryos are cryopreserved in labs in Berlin, Germany and Cremona, Italy. The BioRescue team successfully implanted a southern white rhino embryo in a southern white rhino surrogate named Curra in 2023 in a complicated procedure, but Curra died in November due to a rare bacterial infection. Efforts to reproduce the pregnancy with a northern white rhino embryo are ongoing. == Recently deceased rhinos ==