WildLanscapes International united key players in Kenyan conservation for high-level meetings in Washington, D.C. this past June. This collaboration marks a milestone in our ongoing conservation efforts, as it is the first time our partners have come together as a coalition to lobby congress.
Our goal: advocate for increased U.S. financial support for African conservation, with a special focus on creating a contiguous habitat for Eastern black rhino in Laikipia.
Recently, there have been several exciting developments in Ol Pejeta. Many sources of international press have focused on the conservation work being done to save the last northern white rhinos from extinction. Only two females remain, a mother and daughter (Najin and Fatu), and ground-breaking science is being carried out to produce embryos using eggs from these rhinos, fertilized by sperm collected from now-deceased males. The embryos are expected to be carried to term in due course by surrogate southern white rhinos.