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Ideas, Inventions And Innovations : Upside down can be right way for rhino transport


Ideas, Inventions And Innovations
Upside down can be right way for rhino transport
When it comes to saving endangered species of a certain size, conservationists often have to think outside the box.
A recent study from researchers in the College of Veterinary Medicine analyzed the effects of hanging tranquilized black rhinoceroses upside down by their feet.
Credit: Cornell University
This was reinforced by a recent study published in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases, led by faculty in the College of Veterinary Medicine, which analyzed the effects of hanging tranquilized black rhinoceroses upside down by their feet.
“We found that suspending rhinos by their feet is safer than we thought,” said Dr. Robin Radcliffe, senior lecturer in wildlife and conservation medicine and first author of the study. ....

Stephena Parry , Bakker Manuel , Mark Jago , Robin Radcliffe , Michelea Miller , Birgit Kotting , Julia Felippe , Piet Beytell , Estelle Morkel , Lauren Roberts , Robinw Radcliffe , Jiji Foundation , Waterburg National Park , Namibian Ministry Of Environment , Cornell University , College Of Veterinary Medicine , Veterinary Medicine , Wildlife Diseases , Robin Gleed , Namibian Ministry , Metabolic Effects , Feet Compared With Lateral Recumbency , Immobilized Black Rhinoceroses , Jan Hendrik , Gleed Journal , பேக்கர் மானுவல் ,

When rhinos fly: Upside down the right way for transport


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ITHACA, NY - When it comes to saving endangered species of a certain size, conservationists often have to think outside the box.
This was reinforced by a recent study published in the
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, led by faculty in the College of Veterinary Medicine, which analyzed the effects of hanging tranquilized black rhinoceroses upside down by their feet.
We found that suspending rhinos by their feet is safer than we thought, said Dr. Robin Radcliffe, senior lecturer in wildlife and conservation medicine and first author of the study.
While this finding might sound comical, it is vital information for conservationists working to save these vanishing creatures. To keep rhinos safe from poaching and to distribute individuals across habitats so their gene pools stay healthy, management teams often must move rhinos in remote areas that cannot be accessed by roads or automobiles. This often leaves one option: tranquilizing and airlifting the gian ....

Robin Radcliffe , Jiji Foundation , Waterburg National Park , Namibian Ministry Of Environment , College Of Veterinary Medicine , Wildlife Diseases , Veterinary Medicine , Robin Gleed , Namibian Ministry , ராபின் ராட்க்ளிஃப் , ஜிஜி அடித்தளம் , கல்லூரி ஆஃப் கால்நடை மருந்து , வனவிலங்கு நோய்கள் , கால்நடை மருந்து , ராபின் மகிழ்ச்சி ,