The last surviving Sumatran rhino in Malaysia has died, wildlife officials said on Sunday.

Once found as far away as eastern India and throughout Malaysia, the Sumatran rhino has been almost wiped out, with fewer than 80 left anywhere, according to the World Wildlife Fund for Nature.

Only a handful of the creatures, also known as hairy rhinoceros or Asian two-horned rhinoceros, remain in the wilds of Indonesia.

Sabah Wildlife Department director Augustine Tuuga said the 25-year-old female named Iman died on the island of Borneo from cancer.

“She was starting to suffer significant pain from the growing pressure of the tumours. I think we can confirm that the Sumatran rhino is now extinct in Malaysia,” Tuuga said.

Malaysia’s last male Sumatran rhino died in May this year. Tam also had lived in the same nature reserve with Iman on Borneo Island in Malaysia’s Sabah state.

Borneo Rhino Alliance executive director John Payne said that the Sumatran rhinos have been hard hit by factors including changes in climate, vegetation and hunting to quench demand for traditional Chinese medicine.