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Endangered rhinos could be saved by sperm made from flesh of dead male

Tissue taken from last Sumatran rhinoceros to make ‘mini brain’ paves the way to produce sperm which could boost conservation programmes

Rhinos on the brink of extinction could be saved by sperm made in a lab from a now dead male, scientists believe. 

A chunk of flesh taken from the shoulder of the last male Sumatran rhino in Malaysia, Tam, who died in 2019, has been used to make a rhinoceros “mini brain” in a world first.

And the researchers believe that if they can produce a mini brain in a dish from frozen tissue samples of a dead rhino, they may be able to make sperm to help save the species. 

Rhino populations are dwindling globally, with the five species struggling from poaching and habitat loss. Sumatran rhinos like Tam number just 80 globally and are critically endangered. 

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