Photo: San Diego Zoo Safari Park

southern white rhino calf

The San Diego Zoo has a brand new addition!

A male southern white rhino calf was born at the zoo on Sunday — the first rhino born at conservation organization San Diego Zoo Global after artificial insemination.

According toa press releasefrom the zoo, Victoria, the calf’s mother, was artificially inseminated with frozen semen from a male southern white rhino in March 2018 and carried the calf for 493 days before giving birth.

The zoo reports that Victoria and her calf, named Edward, are now bonding in a quiet setting, and both mother and son are doing well. A second release explains that Edward is “very brave and curious” but “never ventures far from his mother’s side.”

“All of us at San Diego Zoo Global are elated with the arrival of this special rhino calf,” said Dr. Barbara Durrant, the Henshaw Endowed Director of Reproductive Sciences at the zoo.

San Diego Zoo Safari Park

southern white rhino calf

According to the press release, the birth was also the first successful artificial insemination birth of a southern white rhino in North America.

The zoo notes that the birth was a “critical step” in the organization’s mission to “genetically recover” the northern white rhino, a subspecies of the southern white rhino. According to the zoo, only two northern white rhinos remain on the planet, and both are female.

The press release reports that researchers are optimistic that a northern white rhino calf could be born through various processes including artificial insemination within the next 10 to 20 years.

southern white rhino calf

Sunday’s birth marks the 99th southern white rhino born at the zoo’s Safari Park, according to the release.

In order to let the pair bond, Victoria and Edward won’t be on view to the public for an undisclosed period of time.

The southern white rhino is listed as “near threatened” on theInternational Union for Conservation of Nature‘s Red List of Threatened Species. The zoo reports that there are about 18,000 remaining in the wild, but they are at risk due to poaching and the illegal trafficking of rhino horn.

source: people.com