Abstract

The onslaught on the World’s rhinoceroses continues despite numerous initiatives aimed at curbing it. When losses due to poaching exceed birth rates, declining rhino populations result. We used previously published estimates and growth rates for black rhinos (2008) and white rhinos (2010) together with known poaching trends at the time to predict population sizes and poaching rates in Kruger National Park, South Africa for 2013. Kruger is a stronghold for the south-eastern black rhino and southern white rhino. Counting rhinos on 878 blocks 3x3 km in size using helicopters, estimating availability bias and collating observer and detectability biases allowed estimates using the Jolly’s estimator. The exponential escalation in number of rhinos poached per day appears to have slowed. The black rhino estimate of 414 individuals (95% confidence interval: 343-487) was lower than the predicted 835 individuals (95% CI: 754-956). The white rhino estimate of 8,968 individuals (95% CI: 8,394-9,564) overlapped with the predicted 9,417 individuals (95% CI: 7,698-11,183). Density- and rainfall-dependent responses in birth- and death rates of white rhinos provide opportunities to offset anticipated poaching effects through removals of rhinos from high density areas to increase birth and survival rates. Biological management of rhinos, however, need complimentary management of the poaching threat as present poaching trends predict detectable declines in white rhino abundances by 2018. Strategic responses such as anti-poaching that protect supply from illegal harvesting, reducing demand, and increasing supply commonly require crime network disruption as a first step complimented by providing options for alternative economies in areas abutting protected areas.

Highlights

  • Mega-herbivores are key species that influence several objectives that conservation agencies seek to achieve [1]

  • The white rhino estimates we provide in this study suggest that the high annual growth rates observed between 1998 and 2008 (Fig 4) and for many years before that [6], were not sustained in recent years

  • If the poaching onslaught does not decrease and the poaching rates continue to rise at current levels, we estimate that white rhino population will plummet to 2879 to 3263 individuals by 2018, about a third of the Rainfall + Population size

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Summary

Objectives

Using a combination of black rhino demographic information obtained during 2008 [5] together with recorded poaching incidences between 2008 and 2012, we aim to predict the expected number of black rhinos killed per day as well as their population size during 2013

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