|      In a    desperate bid to preserve a critically endangered species, a US zoo is taking    the controversial step of trying to mate brother and sister captive Sumatran    rhinoceroses. The coupling of    six-year-old Harapan and his older sister Suci could take place as early as    August at the Cincinnati Zoo in Ohio, animal keepers say. The tactic has stirred    strong emotions, but Terri Roth, director of the Lindner Center for    Conservation and Research of Endangered Wildlife, said she has no other    choice. "We are in a really    tough spot and we just don't have any other options," she told AFP. Conservation experts say    there are as few as 100 Sumatran rhinos left in the wild in their native    lands of Indonesia and Malaysia. In captivity, there are    only 10 in the world. Four of them are closely related, with three having    been bred in recent years at the Cincinnati Zoo. A fourth born in    Indonesia last year was the son of a Cincinnati-bred captive rhino and a    formerly wild rhino. For Suci, who is marking    her ninth birthday next week, the only available suitors are her relatives,    Roth said. The other captive male of    age in Indonesia is her older brother. Harapan, who is on the    cusp of adulthood, was brought to Ohio earlier this month from his previous    home at the Los Angeles Zoo. Artificial insemination    has never worked in Sumatran rhinos, so shipping sperm from a genetically    unique mate is not a viable alternative. "Unless Indonesia    were to capture more animals and an unrelated male became available to us, we    don't have the genetic diversity that we need," Roth said. In the meantime, experts say    female rhinos need to breed in order to keep their reproductive organs from    developing cysts that eventually render them infertile. "Female rhinos, if    they don't reproduce they tend to lose the ability to reproduce. It is kind    of use it or lose it with them," said Susie Ellis, executive director of    the International Rhino Foundation. Ellis said the population    of Sumatran rhinos has dwindled dramatically due to humans encroaching on    their land and poaching for their horns, which some Asian cultures believe    carry healing powers though they consist of simple keratin, the same protein    as in nails, hair and hooves. "The species has    really hit a crisis point," said Ellis. "There are maybe as    few as 100 animals left in the wild." Still, the decision to    breed siblings carries risks, including abnormalities, harmful genetic    mutations and poor sperm quality in the offspring. "In general, we are    very much against the idea of breeding relatives because we know that more    often than not it causes problems," said David Wildt, head of the Center    for Species Survival at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute. "I don't know if I    would call it a solution. I think it is a strategy. And it really opens up    some healthy debate," he added. "If those were the    last animals on the planet, what else would you do? But this isn't the    situation here, though. These aren't the last two animals on the    planet." Zookeepers are hopeful    that the Indonesian government will take steps to capture some wild rhinos    that may be in isolation already due to deforestation, and add them to their    captive sanctuary population in order to boost breeding options. Roth said she was aware    of the publicity the decision to mate siblings would bring -- both good and    bad -- and she hopes it raises people's interest in preserving the habitat of    these precious creatures. The Sumatran rhino    "is not like the giant panda that everybody knows about and follows. I    thought people need to know about this," she said. "We are about to    lose this rhino quietly, without a whimper, and I don't want to see that    happen."  |    
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