TRAVERSE Issue 19 - August 2020 | страница 93

It’s estimated that rhinoceros horn is valued at around AU$185,000 per kilogram, three times the value of gold, there’s little wonder it’s a highly sought after commodity throughout Asia. Once a mainstay of Chinese traditional medicine it is now a symbol of status, a symbol of extreme wealth. In the earlier part of the 20th Century, species of rhino were on the brink of extinction, the White rhino was down to just 10 in the wild and while in a better position the Black rhino was also threatened and believed that approximately only 100 existed. Conservation work throughout the middle of the century brought numbers back and by the 1960s it was estimated that Black Rhino numbers were back to around 100,000. Sadly, it didn’t last long. By 1992 it is said that over 90% of the population was wiped out again due to the demand in Asia. Conservation work continues and while numbers have stabilised less than 25,000 rhinos survive in the wild. Programs operate throughout Asia to educate that rhino horn offers no medicinal purpose, yet the Chinese government reversed an order stating such in 2018 suggesting that rhinos will again be hunted to extinction. Similar programs of education are underway in southern Africa, conservation is high on the agenda NEWS MAGAZINE 93 TRAVERSE 93