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A South African university launched an anti-poaching campaign Thursday to inject the horns of rhinos with radioactive ...
Conservation scientists in South Africa are injecting rhino horns with radioactive isotopes. The doses are too weak to harm ...
For the pilot study, 20 rhinos were injected with the radioactive material last year, which proved that it was not harmful to ...
South African scientists have launched the Rhisotope Project, injecting rhino horns with harmless radioactive isotopes to ...
Scientists in South Africa have begun injecting radioactive material into the horns of live rhinos to make them detectable at ...
While conservation efforts have seen rhino populations in South Africa and other parts of their range begin to bounce back from the brink of extinction, poaching is still very much a problem. In 2024, ...
We are sharing with you today perhaps the saddest wildlife video we’ve uncovered. In a YouTube video from The Telegraph, a ...
In Mokopane, South Africa, researchers at the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg have launched the Rhisotope Project, ...
African safari and wildlife expert Rob the Ranger captures the elusive black, or hook-lipped, rhinoceros in its natural ...
The Rhisotope Project, supported by the IAEA, is safely inserting radioactive isotopes into rhino horns to deter poachers and stop smuggling by making the horns detectable at international borders.
Delivering opening remarks during the second edition of the Youth in Oil and Gas Summit in Namibia this July, Erastus explained that youth often face challenges gaining experience across the oil and ...