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South African scientists will be injected with Rhino’s branches with a radioactive material.
The group, at the University of Witwatersrand, said that the process is detrimental to rhinosation, but customs officers will allow them to detect branches with smuggling while transporting around the world.
South Africa has the greatest rhinocerio world and hundreds of animals are pounding every year.
The University project called the Rhisotope project, cost about £ 220,000 ($ 290,000) and six years of research and tests.
“At least one animal is poisoning a day,” said James Larkin, a professor at the University participating in the project, said BBC.
“I think if we don’t see the figures only go a way …. This is a significant tool to help reduce the number of reagents, because we are protactive instead of reactive.”
The Larkin profile added 20 Rinocer who took part in the pilot exam, confirmed that radioactive material was “completely safe” for animals.
Jessica Babilich said the head of the Rhitsotope project: “Our goal is to expand the income technology scale, to help protect one of African iconic and most threatened species.”
“If you do this, we do not support only the es, but the essential of our natural heritage.”
The branches of university researchers found the international energy agency agency found that the branches found the branches of the 40 meters (six meters).
Since 2021 each year, more than 400 rino has been in South Africa, says the conservation charity reserved the Rino.
African ringers are exported to Asian markets as many as traditional medicine are used and also seen as a symbol of the situation.
White rhinocia are considered threats, and black rhinocermates are critically in danger.