Kenya will tag rhino horns with microchips: suck it, poachers!

Posted October  19, 2013 – 19:35 by   Emory Kale
The Kenyan Wildlife Services (KWS) is going  all 2013 on poachers’ asses by making rhino  horn 100% traceable. Now that’s what you call disruptive technology that really makes  a difference.
KWS says that it is going to match each rhino horn through DNA so that even poached rhino horn can be recovered and  confiscated should the need arise. The increasing sophistication of poachers  means that it is increasingly more difficult to protect the rhinos but tracking  should protect them on-site and bring justice against the traffickers.
The World  Wildlife Fund (WWF) expects that criminal justice will be able to effectively respond to  wildlife crime, and through tracking, closer links between customs, police,  wildlife agencies and defense will help to dismantle the networks that support  the international wildlife  trade.
KWS received 1,000 microchips and five scanners from the WWF this week.  This $15,300 investment in equipment will be used to target the rhino  populations in Kenya that are under the greatest threat, as well as auditing stockpiling  rhino horns.
In the last 20 months, the African continent has seen over 1,000 rhinos  killed with Kenya bearing a big brunt of the crisis of poaching. Since the  beginning of this year, Kenya itself has lost 21 rhinos and 117 elephants to  poachers. Only 37 of the elephants killed were in protected areas, and  obviously, that didn’t secure their well being.
According to the WWF:
Although there is no scientific proof of its medical value, rhino horn  is highly prized in traditional Asian medicine, where it is ground into a fine  powder or manufactured into tablets as a treatment for a variety of illnesses  such as nosebleeds, strokes, convulsions, and fevers.
This demand has created highly profitable and organized international  poaching criminal syndicates who deploy advanced technologies ranging from night  vision scopes, silenced weapons, darting equipment and helicopters to carry out  their mission.
According to Dr Joseph Okori, head of WWF’s African Rhino  Programme:
“The African rhino is under serious threat from poachers who have  intensified their search of rhino for their horns since 2007, driven by growing  market demands in Asia.”
Thanks to successful conservation  efforts,  Southern Africa is now home to the majority of Africa’s surviving  rhinos. 
Even so, South Africa – home to more than 80% of Africa’s rhino  populations –  is losing hundreds of rhinos each year.  In this  country alone:
122 rhinos were killed in 2009
333 rhinos were killed in 2010
388 rhinos have been killed so far in 2012
Help the WWF by donating  here if you can.
Kenyan Wildlife Service is using microchips to track rhino horns to save rhinos from poaching on-site and when trafficked

Read more at http://www.tgdaily.com/sustainability-brief/80921-kenya-will-tag-rhino-horns-with-microchips-suck-it-poachers#SIaPIlSJuDikAhoK.99



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