Rhinos are facing another fight for their very survival. Last century, they were hunted and poached to the brink of extinction. A global conservation campaign gave them a lifeline, but their future is once again hanging by a thread.
Microchipping away at poaching
Backed by organised criminal networks, poachers are using 21st century weapons and technology to supply the growing demand for rhino horn, primarily in Viet Nam. But conservationists are fighting back with new tools and techniques of their own. WWF has been working with the Kenya Wildlife Service to microchip black rhinos, helping them to gather crucial data – and provide evidence to prosecute poachers.
Hidden in their horns, the minute chips allow researchers to individually identify Kenya’s endangered rhinos and monitor each animal. And if poachers do strike, those tiny bits of technology could ensure that they – and others along the trafficking chain – pay for their crimes.
Nowhere is the rhino war more bloody than in South Africa. A record 1,215 were poached in 2014 and the killing goes on – despite greater efforts to protect them. But some new populations of black rhinos are thriving.
By expanding their living space, the project has ensured there are significantly more black rhinos today than there otherwise would have been. And more translocations are planned. But extra land and enhanced anti-poaching efforts alone cannot win the war against today’s rhino poachers. So WWF is also working to help tackle the traffickers and reduce demand for rhino horn in Viet Nam.
The future of the world’s remaining rhinos will ultimately be decided in Asia, particularly in Viet Nam, where there is growing demand for their horns – either as status symbols or for their perceived health benefits.
Stopping the buying and the trafficking
WWF and TRAFFIC are using innovative approaches to change consumer behaviour and tackle this demand, such as the Chi (‘Strength of Will’) campaign in Viet Nam. Rather than focusing on the plight of endangered rhinos, this campaign seeks to undermine one of the main emotional reasons for buying rhino horn – by showing influential men that they don’t need it to bolster their self-esteem or demonstrate their success in business.
However, changing consumers’ minds does not happen overnight. In the meantime, organized criminal gangs will continue to try to profit from the rhino horn trade. And WWF will continue to make it as hard as possible for them to operate – by supporting communities and rangers to protect rhino sanctuaries and by working with partners and governments to break up their trafficking networks from Africa to Asia. Only by targeting all points along the trade chain will those striving to save the rhino have a chance of winning the war.
WWF and TRAFFIC are using innovative approaches to change consumer behaviour and tackle this demand, such as the Chi (‘Strength of Will’) campaign in Viet Nam. Rather than focusing on the plight of endangered rhinos, this campaign seeks to undermine one of the main emotional reasons for buying rhino horn – by showing influential men that they don’t need it to bolster their self-esteem or demonstrate their success in business.
However, changing consumers’ minds does not happen overnight. In the meantime, organized criminal gangs will continue to try to profit from the rhino horn trade. And WWF will continue to make it as hard as possible for them to operate – by supporting communities and rangers to protect rhino sanctuaries and by working with partners and governments to break up their trafficking networks from Africa to Asia. Only by targeting all points along the trade chain will those striving to save the rhino have a chance of winning the war.

However, changing consumers’ minds does not happen overnight. In the meantime, organized criminal gangs will continue to try to profit from the rhino horn trade. And WWF will continue to make it as hard as possible for them to operate – by supporting communities and rangers to protect rhino sanctuaries and by working with partners and governments to break up their trafficking networks from Africa to Asia. Only by targeting all points along the trade chain will those striving to save the rhino have a chance of winning the war.
However, changing consumers’ minds does not happen overnight. In the meantime, organized criminal gangs will continue to try to profit from the rhino horn trade. And WWF will continue to make it as hard as possible for them to operate – by supporting communities and rangers to protect rhino sanctuaries and by working with partners and governments to break up their trafficking networks from Africa to Asia. Only by targeting all points along the trade chain will those striving to save the rhino have a chance of winning the war.
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