While Namibia and other southern African countries are struggling to protect their rhinos from poaching, scientists are looking for solutions to make the rhino financially unattractive to poachers. According to a new research report published in Science magazine on June 5, dehorning is currently the most effective solution to prevent poaching. The team of scientists led by Kuiper, Haussmann and Whitfield found that dehorning rhinos leads to a drastic reduction in poaching compared to other measures. The researchers point out that no other anti-poaching measure - such as protective fences or a higher concentration of rangers - has such a measurable effect. In eleven reserves in southern Africa, which protect the largest rhino population in the world, the researchers documented the poaching of 1985 rhinos between 2017 and 2023, around 6.5% of the population annually, despite around 74 million US dollars being spent on anti-poaching efforts. Most of the investment focused on reactive law enforcement - rangers, sniffer dogs, access controls and detection cameras - which resulted in more than 700 poachers being apprehended, the researchers said. "However, we found no statistical evidence that these interventions reduced poaching (demand for horn, wealth inequality, criminal syndicates and corruption likely even drive high-risk poaching)," the scientists said. "In contrast, reducing rewards to poachers through dehorning (2284 rhinos in eight reserves) resulted in a large (~78%) and abrupt reduction in poaching for an investment of 1.2% of the budget." According to the research report, dehorning reduced poaching by more than three quarters with just over one percent of the budget. "Some poaching of dehorned rhino continued as poachers targeted horn stumps and regrowth, highlighting the need for regular dehorning along with judicious use of law enforcement."
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| NAM_2025_06_Dehorning reduces poaching by 78 percent_Tourismus.pdf | 62.27 KB |
This article is part of the Namibian Wildlife Crime article archive. The archive aims to:
» Search the Namibian wildlife crime article archive.