Monarto Safari Park

Monarto Zoo helping to save endangered rhinos from extinction

Monarto Zoo is proud to be associated with The Australian Rhino Project which aims to relocate 80 endangered Southern White Rhinoceros to Australia in an effort to safeguard the species while the poaching crisis in Africa is brought under control.

In a world first, Zoos SA is working with The Australian Rhino Project and other Australian Zoos to ensure the rhinos are relocated to Australia as soon as possible.

Zoos SA Chief Executive Elaine Bensted said Monarto Zoo would be critical in the success of this project with rhinos calling Monarto Zoo home in the next few years.

“It is hoped that the first rhinos will arrive in Australia this year and that a number of these will find a home at Monarto Zoo,” Elaine said.

“We’re pleased and excited to be partnering with a project that will safeguard the species.

“Our keeping staff are passionate conservationists and are looking forward to working to protect this species from extinction.”

Monarto Zoo is currently home to six Southern White Rhinoceros and two Black Rhinoceros, and last year celebrated the birth our fifth Southern White Rhinoceros calf.

Monarto Zoo will utilise 500 hectares of the 1500 hectare Monarto property for the rhinos.

Designs for the construction of facilities required for the quarantine and housing of more rhinos that will be placed at Monarto Zoo are currently being prepared.

The current plan is for the first group of rhinos to arrive into Taronga Western Plains Zoo in NSW where they will go into quarantine. It is anticipated that the first three of that group would move to Monarto Zoo where they will be able to be housed with Monarto Zoo’s existing rhinos.

Funding is also critical to this mission in order to cover the cost of transporting the rhinos by air from South Africa to Australia, preparing the facilities, quarantine, and ongoing support and maintenance of the herd.

Why is it so important to get the rhinos to Australia? 

The objective of the Australian Rhino Project, working with Australian zoos including Monarto Zoo, is to maintain a viable population, with targeted genetic and demographic management that will ultimately allow for the repatriation of African rhinoceros back to their natural habitat and homelands should it be required.

“More than 1,300 rhinos were poached last year in South Africa alone, we’ve nearly reached the tipping point where more rhinos are poached each year than are born,” Elaine said.

“It’s becoming increasingly apparent we must increase our efforts to safeguard and breed rhinos in protected places like zoos and wildlife sanctuaries.”

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About Zoos SA

Zoos SA is a not-for-profit conservation charity that exists to connect people with nature and save species from extinction.

Zoos SA acknowledges the Country on which we stand always was, and always will be, Aboriginal land and we pay our deepest respect and gratitude to Kaurna (Adelaide Zoo) and Ngarrindjeri (Monarto Safari Park) Elders, past, present and emerging.

We undertake critical conservation work throughout Australia and acknowledge the traditional custodians of these lands.

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