Late last month, a special kind of male joined the Tinder social network. Many may have come across Sudan’s profile. He’s 43, 6ft, originally from Kenya, loves the outdoors and travels widely.
Turns out he’s a RHINO. Sudan is the world’s last male white northern rhino and desperately needs to mate to preserve this species.
His profile on the popular dating app reads:Â “I don’t mean to be too forward, but the fate of my species literally depends on me. “I perform well under pressure. I like to eat grass and chill in the mud. No problems. 6 ft tall and 5,000 pounds if it matters.”
But three weeks since Sudan joined the dating network, it’s all gone silent from his handlers. Sudan, it seems, has yet to find a match.
Maybe he needs to improve his profile to attract suitors or try his luck on Facebook!
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On a serious note, conservationists are hoping that Sudan’s Tinder profile will help them raise enough money for $9-million fertility treatment as all attempts at getting him to mate naturally have failed.
Scientists would then use Sudan’s sperm to fertilize an egg from one of the two last northern white rhino females: 17-year-old Satu or 27-year-old Najin. The embryo will be implanted in a surrogate southern white rhino, a far more common species.
Guided mounting of a girl
“We tried everything to get them to mate naturally,” said Elodie Sampere, the marketing manager at Kenya’s Ol Pejeta conservancy, where all three white rhinos are accompanied by 24-hour armed guards, after the Tinder profile was created on April 26th.
“When he first tried to mount the girl, the rangers guided him … but it is difficult with a rhino,” she said.
“We removed them from a zoo environment, which was not conducive to natural instincts, and put them in a semi-wild environment. There were a couple of matings, but it never resulted in a pregnancy.”
Poachers sell northern white rhinos horns for $50,000 (Ksh million) per kilo, making them more valuable than gold or cocaine, and his keepers fear that Sudan, who at 43 is ancient for a rhino, may die or be killed before they can raise enough money.
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“There’s always that fear. He’s old, he might die soon,” said rhino expert Richard Vigne, the CEO of Ol Pejeta. “As long as the demand for rhino horn in the Far East persists, there will always be an ever-present threat.”
A swipe right on Sudan’s Tinder profile – available in 190 countries and 40 languages – directs users to the Ol Pejeta donation page: www.olpejetaconservancy.org/