Black Rhino Range
Black Rhino Translocation, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Photo Credit: Peter Chadwick

Earlier this month the WWF South Africa Black Rhino Range Expansion Project completed the successful move of a further 20 rhinos to new homes including the 250th rhino to be moved.

 

South Africa (13 November 2023) – The Black Rhino Range Expansion Project (BRREP) is celebrating its 20th anniversary in its tireless work to increase the population of this critically endangered species – but the good news doesn’t stop there.

BRREP has just translocated a further 20 rhinos bringing the total number of rhinos to have been moved to 250. In this instance, the rhinos were captured from a reserve managed by the Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Agency (ECPTA).

In the past two decades, more than 200 calves have been born on BRREP sites – and the hope is that this latest move will encourage even more successful breeding.

As a result of these and other efforts, black rhino numbers have more than doubled in the past two decades, from their low point of fewer than 2,500 individuals before the turn of the century. Current estimates are that there are around 6,200 black rhinos (IUCN figure released in 2022).

These numbers represent a significant proportion of the current global population estimate for black rhinos and illustrate the importance of a project such as this in pursuing the targets set for the D.B minor species in African rhino range states and in terms of the South African National Biodiversity Management Plan.

BRREP’s work focuses on finding space for the rhinos to breed. When black rhinos are removed from reserves with existing populations, this helps to relieve pressure and stimulates breeding. The new populations are able to increase their numbers further as they have more space to breed and thrive.

Project Leader Jeff Cooke commented: “BRREP continues to be the most effective mechanism for range expansion and, despite its small size and modest budget, has contributed enormously towards securing the remaining habitat and growing the population.

“Current continental population estimates show some positive growth which is largely due to the increased productivity from newly established sites that are breeding at close to their biological potential. The range expansion model is a critical ingredient in the efforts to save the species and it is hoped that its effects will be magnified as the project starts to benefit from compounded growth.”

Cooke added that this latest milestone would not have been possible without the ongoing support of project partners like Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife (EKZNW) and the Eastern Cape Parks and Tourism Agency (ECPTA). Also vital to the success of this endeavour are the forward-thinking private and communal landowners who are committed to the long-term survival of the species. Thanks also go to WWF Netherlands for its ongoing funding support.

Black Rhino Translocation, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Photo Credit: Peter Chadwick

Project milestones

2004 – BRREP moves its first 15 rhinos to a game reserve in KwaZulu-Natal.
2017  – Rhinos born on a BRREP site are translocated as part of a group to establish a new population for the first time. Today, about 50% of rhinos translocated originate from BRREP sites, the other 50% are still removed from EKZNW and ECPTA reserves.
2019 – BRREP successfully completes its first international black rhino translocation, and the largest one by air in history, to Malawi. The move requires the team to fly the rhinos from Durban in South Africa to Lilongwe in Malawi in a Boeing 747 and from there transport them by road for a further six hours to their final destination.
2023 – BRREP celebrates 20 years of raising rhinos – not only by using helicopters to airlift them but also by stimulating breeding and the raising of new calves on BRREP sites. In November, the project moves its 250th rhino!


Sources: WWF South Africa
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About the Author

Tyler Leigh Vivier is a writer for Good Things Guy.

Her passion is to spread good news across South Africa with a big focus on environmental issues, animal welfare and social upliftment. Outside of Good Things Guy, she is an avid reader and lover of tea.

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