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Is there a story leading up to this one? I guess I was looking for answers to questions like:

- At what point did Sudan become the last male northern white rhino?

- Were similar conservation and breeding efforts done on the previous male northern white rhinos?

- If so, why did those fail (for both conservation and breeding)?

- How far back were conservation and breeding efforts executed and failed, leading up to the last one?

- Is this a case of hunting efforts out-pacing diligent conservation and breeding efforts, or was there not enough education and funding for truly diligent conservation and breeding efforts?

Unfortunately, the goal of this article seems to be to strike at the readers' emotions vs. present a factual story of the past and present. Not saying the former is bad, just that I was hoping for more of the latter.



There's eight links of "related content" underneath this article. Not all about this particular species, but pretty easy to filter through to see what's directly related:

In 2007, there were 14 of these rhinos left, 4 wild and 10 in captivity: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2007/mar/04/conservat... - this article also cited a number of 30 back in 2000.

In October 2014, the second-to-last male died at the relatively young age of 34, leaving just 6 and removing the last realistic hope for breeding: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/oct/18/northern-...

In December 2014, the next-to-last male died, of old age, leaving just 5: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/dec/15/northern-...

It's painting a pretty dismal picture altogether. I guess conservation efforts were too little, too late, with the remaining population already too small and too aged to ever offer much hope for success. :(




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