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Malaysia’s last ever Sumatran Rhino dies

Sumatran Rhino

Malaysia’s last ever Sumatran Rhino dies as critically endangered species creeps ever closer to total extinction.

The Wildlife Department in eastern Sabah state on Borneo island said the 25-year-old female rhino named Iman died of natural causes.

Sabah state environment minister Christina Liew said: “Its death was a natural one, and the immediate cause has been categorised as shock.”

The rhino was suffering significant pain from growing pressure of the tumours to her bladder but that her death came sooner than expected.

It came six months after the death of the country’s only male rhino in Sabah.

Another female rhino also died in captivity in 2017 in the state. Efforts to breed them have been futile but Sabah authorities have harvested their cells for possible reproduction.

Iman had escaped death several times over the past few years due to sudden massive blood loss.

But wildlife officials managed to nurse her back to health and obtained her egg cells.

 Minister Christina Liew, right, visits Iman in cage in eastern Sabah state in August
Minister Christina Liew, right, visits Iman in cage in eastern Sabah state in August – Credit: AP:Associated Press

It is hoped there could be a possible collaboration with Indonesia to reproduce the critically endangered species through artificial insemination.

The Sumatran rhino, the smallest of five rhinoceros species, once roamed across Asia as far as India, but its numbers have shrunk drastically due to deforestation and poaching.

The WWF conservation group estimates that there are only about 80 left, mostly living in the wild in Sumatra and Borneo in Indonesia.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature identifies the Sumatran as well as the Black and Javan rhinoceros as being critically endangered.

Both African and Sumatran rhinoceros have two horns, while the others have a single horn.

Only about 24,500 rhinos survive in the wild with another 1,250 in captivity worldwide, the IUCN says.

Of these, more than two-thirds are white rhinos.

Rhinos are killed for their horns, which consist of keratin similar to human hair and nails and are used in traditional medicines in parts of Asia.

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