Risky conclusions regarding shrinking rhino horns

Author:

Ferreira S. M.123ORCID,’t Sas‐Rolfes M.14ORCID,Balfour D.15,Barichievy C.16,Chege G.17,Dean C.18,Doak N.1,Dublin H. T.19,du Toit R.110,Ellis S.111,Emslie R. H.112,Flamand J.113,Gadd M.114,Gaymer J.115,Hofmeyr M.116,Knight M.11718,Moodley Y.119,Shaw J.18,Versteege L.120,Vigne L.121,von Houwald F.122,Uri‐Khob S.123,Mosweu K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. African Rhino Specialist Group Gaborone Botswana

2. Scientific Services Skukuza South Africa

3. Department of Conservation and Marine Sciences Cape Peninsula University of Technology Cape Town South Africa

4. Oxford Martin School University of Oxford Oxford UK

5. Nelson Mandela University Gqeberha South Africa

6. Conservation Alpha Cape Town South Africa

7. WWF Kenya Nairobi Kenya

8. Save the Rhino International London UK

9. IUCN ESARO and the International Institute for Environment and Development Nairobi Kenya

10. Lowveld Rhino Trust Harare Zimbabwe

11. Asian Rhino Specialist Group Beltola India

12. ECOSCOT CS Hilton South Africa

13. Black Rhino Range Expansion Project, WWF South Africa Himeville South Africa

14. Walter Conservation Denver Colorado USA

15. Ol Jogi Conservancy Nanyuki Kenya

16. Wildlife Conservation Network Stanford South Africa

17. WWF Namibia Windhoek Namibia

18. Nelson Mandela University Port Elizabeth South Africa

19. Department of Biological Sciences University of Venda Thohoyandou South Africa

20. Beekse Bergen Hilvarenbeek The Netherlands

21. Oxford Wildlife Trade Research Group Oxford Brookes University Oxford UK

22. Animal Park Berne Berne Switzerland

23. Save the Rhino Trust Khorixas Namibia

Abstract

Abstract Image‐based analyses from an online repository on rhino horns asserted that declines in size over time could be the consequence of poaching and hunting. We provide reflections on whether the sample was representative enough to make generalizations, the study adequately accounted for the main sources of horn‐size variation and the statistical methods were adequate to be confident in the results. The sample had a limited representation, most coming from zoo animals. We highlight several sources of variance in horn size that such a sample could not evaluate robustly using linear regressions, both for establishing a proxy for horn size corrected for size of a rhino and assessing trends over time. Nevertheless, horn poaching continues to be the key threat to rhinos. Addressing the underlying drivers of poaching and trafficking are key priorities for responsible public debate, policy making and interventions. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference25 articles.

1. Legal hunting for conservation of highly threatened species: The case of African rhinos

2. BBC. (2022a).Government says it remains committed to banning hunting trophies.https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk‐politics‐60758451

3. BBC. (2022b).Rhino poaching: Are rhinos evolving to grow smaller horns?https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/63471069

4. White rhinoceros C eratotherium simum horn development and structure: a deceptive optical illusion

5. An analysis of threats, strategies, and opportunities for African rhinoceros conservation

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