BIAZA and Nature's SAFE join forces to fight extinction
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International conservation charity ZSL has partnered with living biobank Nature’s SAFE to help store the living genetics of the world’s most endangered species.
With more than 40,000 species currently at risk of extinction, ZSL has joined Nature’s SAFE’s mission to save those species most at risk – by providing samples from post-mortems undertaken at ZSL’s two conservation zoos, London and Whipsnade.
The new partnership provides an essential opportunity to grow the 100 species samples Nature’s SAFE has already carefully banked; from southern white rhinos at Whipsnade Zoo to Critically Endangered mountain chicken frogs at London Zoo, future collected samples will be sent to Nature’s SAFE’s dedicated lab in Shropshire, to record and preserve the live genetics of threatened species from around the world.
Nature’s SAFE is one of Europe’s first Living Biobanks dedicated to preserving endangered animals and uses innovative processing and storage techniques, enabling multiple tissue and reproductive cell samples from endangered species to be stored in a living state at -196°C.
Once thawed, these stored living cells could one day – if needed – be used in cell culture or assisted reproductive technologies to continue the existence of threatened species and maintain genetic diversity in the species’ gene pool.
ZSL Senior Vet Dr Taina Strike said: “With so many animals at risk of extinction, outside-of-the-box thinking and collaboration is vital for the preservation of threatened species.
“For almost 200 years international conservation charity ZSL has been at the forefront of wildlife science and conservation and we’ll continue to explore all avenues to keep one step ahead of the threats facing animals across the world.
Sophie Pulcella, Nature’s SAFE Charity Coordinator added: “The UK has the potential to be genuinely ‘world leading’ in providing a meaningful ‘Genetic Resources Insurance’ for future generations by establishing a ‘back-stop’ now via tissue banking. We see the cryoconservation work of Nature’s SAFE, as the best way of putting a floor in the losses of genetic biodiversity, and appreciate the opportunity to work with ZSL to make this happen”
Professor Suzannah Williams, Chief Scientist at Nature’s SAFE and founder of the Rhino Fertility Project at Oxford University, said: “Nature’s SAFE is acting now to preserve species before they are lost using both established methodologies and exploring the most promising innovations in assisted reproductive technologies; our partnerships are critical to achieving impact now and, in the future, and it’s thanks to passionate organisations such as ZSL, that we can continue to develop innovative strategies to protect the incredible species on our planet.”
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African penguin
Total Population: Less than 40,000 in the wild
Bar-headed goose
Total Population: 97,000 - 118,000 in the wild
Nile Lechwe
Total Population: 30,000 - 40,000 in the wild
Common Hippo
Total Population: Less than 150,000 in the wild
Macaroni Penguin
Total Population: Around 12 million
Orange-headed thrush
Total Population: Unknown
Collared peccary
Total Population: More than 2,000,000 in the wild
Azara’s agouti
Total Population: Unknown
Sacred ibis
Total Population: 200,000 to 450,000 in the wild
Mandarin duck
Total Population: Around 65,000 in the wild
Babirusa
Total Population: Less than 10,000 in the wild
Scimitar-horned oryx
Total Population: Around 400 in the wild
Lesser Madagascan tenrec
Total Population: Unknown
Chimpanzee
Total Population: 170,000 - 300, 000 in the wild
Fea’s tree frog
Total Population: Unknown
Hamerkop
Total Population: Unknown
Capybara
Total Population: Unknown
Black Hornbill
Total Population: Unknown
Black-naped fruit dove
Total Population: Unknown
South American fur seal
Total Population: Around 200,000 in the wild