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High-speed tracking dogs have been a game changer in the fight against rhinoceros poaching in South Africa. Their success depends on their ability to work as a team, which means they sleep and eat in speakers the size of a package shown above.
David Fuchs
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David Fuchs
High speed tracking dogs have been a game changer in the fight against rhinoceros poaching in South Africa. Their success depends on their ability to work as a team, which means that they sleep and eat in pens the size of a package shown above.
David Fuchs
Kock's Ruben trained the South African rangers for over two decades – but last month was the first time that one of his former students had been killed at work.
The July 19 incident, where 34 years old … The former Respect Mathebula died in shootings, it's the first time in 50 years that a ranger is killed by poachers in Kruger National Park. Yet, given the intensity of rhinoceros poaching in the region, this step is as surprising as it is tragic.
Home to nearly 80% of the world's rhino population, South Africa has seen poaching explode in the last decade. In 2007, 13 rhinos were killed by poachers. Last year, that number was 1,028, up from a high of 1,215 three years earlier, according to TRAFFIC, a wildlife trade monitoring network. African rhinos include the almost threatened white rhino and the critically endangered black rhinoceros species.
Growing aggression of poachers – which would be largely related to criminal syndicates in Asia, where rhinoceros horn, valued for its so-called medicinal virtues, According to Kock, who oversees the training of rangers at Southern African Wildlife College From South Africa, a rhinoceros is present in Kruger National Park in South Africa. 2013.
Ian Walton / Getty Images
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