How Can Technology Help Stop Rhino Poachers? - podcast episode cover

How Can Technology Help Stop Rhino Poachers?

Feb 16, 20183 min
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Episode description

A database of rhinoceros DNA is helping catch violent poachers looking to sell rhino horns on the black market. Learn how in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works. Hey there, brain stuff Lauren vogelbamb Here. In seventeen, a South African court sentenced a traditional medicine healer to twenty eight years in prison for rhinoceros poaching. The man was convicted on forensic evidence from the Rhino DNA Indexing System or RHODUS, the DNA matching database that is successfully being used to connect horns, blood, and animal carcasses from specific crime scenes

to the poachers responsible for rhinoceros killings and mutilations. According to a twenty eighteen article in the journal Current Biology, evidence from five thousand, eight hundred crime scenes has been submitted to RHOTUS since its inception. To date, the system has matched rhino DNA to more than a hundred and twenty criminal cases, nine of which have been successfully prosecuted.

The hope is that the same genetic fingerprinting methods used to convict perpetrators of violent human on human crime will result in more poaching convictions, acting at once as a deterrent and a form of wildlife of preservation. In spite of rigid trade bands and strict enforcement, poaching of endangered white and black rhinoceroses in South Africa has increased exponentially, from just thirteen incidents in two thousand and seven to

more than one thousand, two hundred. Wildlife trafficking is one of the biggest illegal black markets in the world, with the keratin rich rhino horn fetching upward of sixty thousand dollars per pound, making it more expensive than gold, diamonds or cocaine. In Vietnam and China, the traffic horn is sometimes thought to be a cure for cancer and impotence, and in some parts of Asia it's considered an aphrodisiac

and a magical cure. All talisman's and curios made from the horn can be seen as status symbols and signs of wealth, and poaching is not limited to the national parks and wilds of African India. The astronomical black market price of rhino horn recently lord criminals to a zoo near Paris, France, where they broke in late at night, shot a rhino named Vince in the head and removed

his horn with a chainsaw. This horrific act prompted a odd discussion about the future security of endangered animals in captivity trafficking is the backbone of the illegal rhino horn trade that makes poaching profitable. Through cooperation with police, arrangers and wildlife investigators, researchers on the Rhodas Team hope to use crime scene DNA to thwart crime syndicates that chip

rhino contraband to foreign countries. Thus far, the Rhodus database has helped to convict poachers and traffickers in South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, and Swaziland. Today's episode is written by Carrie Tato and produced by Tyler Clang. For more on this and lots of other depressing yet slightly hopeful topics, visit our home planet, pastaff works dot com.

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