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Elephant tusks and rhino horns are being dyed pink to stop poachers killing these animals. This claims refers to a real scheme to deter poachers, but dyeing rhino horns does not lead to the bright exterior as the picture suggests—the pictures have been doctored. This scheme has only been used on rhinos, not elephants. An image about dyeing animal tusks and horns pink to combat poaching has been shared tens of thousands of times on Facebook. The images have been doctored. The scheme is a real one, but it only applies to rhinos and it does not turn the outside of the horns a bright colour. The text in the image refers to a scheme to make rhino horns and elephant ivory unsellable and thus stop animals being killed. It reads They use the same pink dye that they use on bank notes. This makes the ivory unsellable and it can’t be consumed. (the animals are not harmed and it is saving their lives). As explained by conservation charity Save the Rhino, there were several real projects where rhinos had their horns filled with a liquid poison/dye mix to devalue their price and deter poachers. The poison is an ectoparasiticide, which is environmentally friendly but toxic to humans, and the dye is the same type of anti-theft ink that is used to tag people and money during robberies. However, the aim of the scheme is to dye the interior of the horn and has very little effect to the outside of the horn. This is a photo of a rhino that has been treated with the dye. The scheme purposely doesn’t leave visible permanent markers because this may make untreated animals on the same properties bigger targets. We’ve not seen any evidence of the scheme being applied to other animals, including elephants. Notably, there has been criticism of how effective this method will be at stopping poaching incidents. The images—which show an elephant with bright pink tusks and a rhinoceros with a bright purple horn—have been digitally altered, as also reported by Africa Check. The same, but unaltered, photos of the elephant and rhino can be found online. Correction 28 February 2020 We updated this article to clarify that rhino horns are not ivory. This article is part of our work fact checking potentially false pictures, videos and stories on Facebook. You can read more about this—and find out how to report Facebook content—here. For the purposes of that scheme, we’ve rated this claim as partly false because the horn dyeing scheme is real, but the images have been doctored.
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