Site icon Conservation news

Uganda imports rhinos from Kenya




Uganda imports rhinos from Kenya


Uganda imports rhinos from Kenya
MONGABAY.COM
July 26, 2005

Uganda has imported four rhinos from Kenya according to the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA). UWA hopes to develop a captive breeding program in an effort to reintroduce rhinos after their disappearance from the country in the 1960s due to poaching.

Uganda is trying to establish itself as a destination for ecotourists. According to UWA Executive Director Moses Wafula Mapesa, “Uganda has 18,000 buffaloes, 3,000 elephants, 315 mountain gorillas, 320 giraffes and 950 chimpanzees” as quoted in a report from The Monitor in Kampala [carried on allAfrica.com].

The rhinoceros or rhino is a large-bodied ungulate native to Africa or Asia. They are characterized by snout-mounted horns made of keratin fibers. The belief in some cultures that their horns have medicinal properties or special powers have made rhinos a popular target by poachers. Today trade in rhinoceros parts is forbidden under the CITES agreements, but poaching is a severe threat to all rhinoceros species.

Two species of rhino are found in Africa: the Black Rhinoceros and the White Rhinoceros. The White Rhino is the most abundant of the two species.


Exit mobile version