The fall out from the trophy hunting dentist

John Y Cannuck

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http://www.outdoorhub.com/news/2016/02/23/zimbabwe-park-to-cull-200-lions-cites-lack-of-hunters/
[h=1]Zimbabwe Park to Cull 200 Lions, Cites Lack of Hunters[/h] By: Daniel Xu +


Posted: 2/23/16

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A wildlife reserve in Zimbabwe says it may have to cull 200 lions in the absence of hunters.

One of Zimbabwe’s largest wildlife reserves, the Bubye Valley Conservancy, recently announced that it was considering culling up to 200 lions as the cats have become increasingly overpopulated. The wildlife reserve said its current population of around 500 lions is unsustainable due to the dramatic decline in hunters, possibly caused by the controversy over Cecil, a lion killed near Hwange National Park last year. Bubye officials say that without hunters to help manage the lion population, they are considering either hiring marksmen to shoot some of the animals, or capturing them and donating the cats to other reserves. Bubye has historically held one of the largest lion populations in Zimbabwe.
“I wish we could give about 200 of our lions away to ease the overpopulation,” Blondie Leathem, the conservancy’s general manager, told the National Post. “If anyone knows of a suitable habitat for them where they will not land up in human conflict, or in wildlife areas where they will not be beaten up because of existing prides, please let us know and help us raise the money to move them.”
Leathem explained that the lions are a big threat to the park’s other denizens, which included antelope, giraffes, leopards, and a number of other native species. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that the conservancy is trying to recover from one of the driest summers on record.
 
Classic example of people having an opinion on something they know nothing about. If they had if taken the time to understand the whole picture this wouldn't have happened.
 
More on the subject...

As 200 African lions face death by culling, where are the anguished cries from the Cecil the lion crowd who are largely responsible for the situation?

Everyone knows the story of last year’s Cecil the lion drama. With a cast that included an old African lion with a cute name, a dentist (hereafter referred to as The Dentist, because the guy has been through enough), various supporting actors (guides, park officials, lawyers and so on), Cecil the lion was a headliner for months.

But the real star of the show was the mob of hundreds of thousands of keyboard warriors, millions even, who we might refer to as the “I Am Cecil” crowd. If we only had a dollar for every gross and pathetic cry of “Death to the Dentist!” or “Your spirit will always be with us Cecil!” uttered by the I Am Cecil crowd, we surely would have raised more funding for African wildlife conservation than all animal rights advocates put together have ever contributed to the cause.

The story of Cecil the lion showed us a few things:

One, that technology truly has made the 21st century into a global community. Hundreds of thousands of people were energized and latched onto a cause in the blink of an eye. They responded to the Cecil story almost as a single organism with their outrage and social media ranting. The force of their number influenced media coverage, government policy, corporate business and even the economies of some countries, unfortunately in a negative rather than positive way.

Two, knowledge, reason, intelligence, common sense, civilized behavior – all of those intellectual traits that allegedly separate humans from other creatures – are irrelevant, or at least subservient to how many people make decisions and invest themselves in issues. That is to say, they don’t need to actually know anything substantive about an issue to rally behind it. They simply need to feel an emotion. Like the angry lynch mob in an old movie western, the ignorant rabble need only the force of their numbers to exact their misguided vengeance on whoever dares question with their rage.

Three, ignorant mob rule – and mob rule is almost always ignorant – often has consequences unforeseen by the mob and unwelcome by everyone involved. That has never been more glaringly evident than in the current revelation by the Bubye Valley Conservancy of Zimbabwe, the country of origin where Cecil the lion was killed, that they are on the verge of killing 200 lions in a mass culling project. The culling is the result of what the New Zealand Herald is calling “the Cecil effect”.

In a nutshell, the Cecil effect describes situations like that in Zimbabwe, where the pressure and negativity that were heaped upon The Dentist has resulted in a significant reduction of hunters willing to face the abusive onslaught of the I Am Cecil crowd. There are other factors involved, such as airline bans on transporting African big game trophies, but they all come back to the activism of the I Am Cecil social justice warriors.

With dwindling hunter numbers so too follow dwindling hunter dollars, which are vital to funding wildlife conservation and management programs. Zimbabwe also responded to the pressure by enacting a somewhat confusing mix of enforced hunting bans followed by lifted bans in certain areas of the country.

The end result of all this is that there develops a shortage of conservation funds, which in turn results in a shortage of resources to effectively manage conservation programs. This weakened economic situation adversely affects wildlife, as well as local communities.

The loss in both funding and hunters to remove surplus animals leads to unchecked lion population growth. Those exploding populations ultimately decimate the herd animals that lion prey upon, until starvation and disease become the norm for the big cats. Incidents of poaching also increase as there are reduced funds with which to combat that ugly business.

The Dentist reportedly paid at least $50,000 for the chance to bag a lion in Zimbabwe. Apply that amount to the 200 lions on death row there. 200 lions at a minimum $50,000 per, equates to $10-million. That’s a ten with six zeros. $10,000,000 that could fund African lion and wildlife conservation, help local communities, prevent poaching, and improve habitat. That’s the kind of resources hunters bring into the equation. But to the I Am Cecil crowd, it is funding they reject as tainted and unworthy, to the detriment of 200 Zimbabwe lions and who knows how many more down the road.

All of this because anti-hunting, animal rights zealots want to preserve every single lion, and they are able to effectively put a stop to the very activity – hunting – that helps ensure that the species survives. They would save a Cecil but lose the entire species – or, in this specific instance, 200 other lions – in the process.

The almost certain killing of the 200 lions can be laid directly at the feet of every single person who used social media or any other outlet to call for an end to trophy hunting in Africa, screamed for the head (both literally and figuratively) of The Dentist, or supported boycotts for companies and airlines associated with African big game hunting safaris. The impending deaths of these 200 lions can be blamed directly on those keyboard activists and celebrities who were part of the Shame the Dentist/Shame Trophy Hunters crowd.

That means you, Ricky Gervais, along with all of the other Hollywood “heroes” who put their names to petitions, held signs reading “I am Cecil” or tweeted their outrage and sadness over a lion they hadn’t even heard of until the day before, from a country they likely couldn’t locate in the correct hemisphere. Gervais and his fellow tastemakers urged a vast army of useful idiots to accomplish precisely what they wanted to accomplish: A virtual ban on trophy hunting, and the resulting cessation of effective human management of wildlife.

Unfortunately, and predictably by those of us who understand how wildlife conservation actually works, their agenda has backfired in what Sporting Classics Daily has called “a bitterly ironic move” as “the country that banned lion hunting after ‘Cecil’ the lion’s death may have to cull 200 surplus lions”. SCD also correctly describes the culling as “a disservice to the country’s economy, hunters, and the animals themselves”.

During the height of the “Cecil the Lion” crusade, animal rights extremists arguably held the future of lions in their hands. Now, because of their misguided actions, we have this recent result of their agenda: 200 lions are soon to be killed, because they have to be killed, lest the entire lion population at Bubye Conservancy, as well as many other wildlife populations in the park, be in jeopardy.

The notion that nature can and will take care of itself is a truism that anti-hunting, anti-wildlife management advocates often declare. However, nature often chooses to take care of itself in ways that we may not feel happy about at all. Nature has used extinction as a management tool far more than humans have ever been responsible for. I doubt any of us would be okay with the extinction of lions.

The world waits to see what, if anything, animal rights activists will do to save the 200 lions on the cull list. After all, they’re the ones responsible for this situation. They cried with holier-than-thou outrage and vengeance when they were on the Cecil bandwagon, ultimately receiving the retreat of the trophy hunters they incorrectly blamed for dwindling lion populations. Where are their cries of shame and contrition now?

Will they continue to push for human non-intervention in wildlife management, ultimately dooming the very wildlife they profess to want to save? Will they hold placards reading “I am Cecil” this time around as well?

Would it not be better for lions if they instead held signs that read “We were wrong”. They may not like hunting, but the longterm health of wildlife demands it.
http://www.wideopenspaces.com/cecil-lion-shamers-discouraged-10000000-lion-conservation-funding/
 
Saying the deaths of these lions lies at the feet of misguided conservationists is a bit of a stretch if I read the article right. The lions would have died at the hands of hunters regardless, the only difference being the hunter would have paid for the privilege.
 
All because a bunch of Brit lion lovers cried over their favorite lion. Social media!

Hunters....the greatest contributors to wildlife and habitat conservation...think Wild Sheep Foundation/Safari Club. Meanwhile the SJW that caused this situation will contribute SFA to solve the problem; but, be happy to complain if the cull goes forward.
 
Man do we live in a screwed up world where wrong is right and right is wrong.

Only the illusion can be imagined and propagated, where blasphemy is held as being true. Right can never be wrong and wrong can never be right as light can never be darkness ...

And yes, I'm going to try posting this on Faecesbook... but my small friend list is short of idiots.
 
Saying the deaths of these lions lies at the feet of misguided conservationists is a bit of a stretch if I read the article right. The lions would have died at the hands of hunters regardless, the only difference being the hunter would have paid for the privilege.

Agreed, These 200 lions would have died anyway, but now they die in vain. Because nobody has paid to hunt them, with all the revenue spin offs to the locals, as well as the funding for local conservation projects. There will be very little of a positive nature coming from their deaths.
 
Saying the deaths of these lions lies at the feet of misguided conservationists is a bit of a stretch if I read the article right. The lions would have died at the hands of hunters regardless, the only difference being the hunter would have paid for the privilege.
And there would have been some serious money going to the Conservation program otherwise none
 
Sad. I see FB shares of various African Hunts that basically scorn anyone hunting in Africa. Killing elephant while eating, killing lion that are near extinction etc...

Tried to argue the facts that locals benefits greatly from these hunts. People are just to pigheaded to even try to understand.

Next headlines will read: Poaching in Africa on the increase...
 
Zimbabwe’s Bubye Valley Conservancy has denied reports that it is considering killing 200 lions, saying that it is merely trying to “translocate or re-home” animals to areas where the ecosystem can accommodate them.


Bubye says that it considered and rejected the option of culling the animals as a way of dealing with over-population in the conservancy.


“We do have more lions than the ecosystem can handle in the long-term, that is, more than the natural carrying capacity,” Blondie Leathem, the general manager of Bubye Valley Conservancy, said in a statement made available to Quartz. “Therefore we are looking to translocate or re-home about 200, as we would rather not cull them.”


On Saturday (Feb. 20), the UK’s Daily Telegraph reported that global outrage at the killing of Zimbabwean lion Cecil by an American dentist last July led to a decline of big-game hunting on the continent, and in turn, an overpopulation of lions at Bubye Conservancy. Leathem, however, denies that less hunting is directly related to over-population issues.


Protection of lion has become one of the top button issues in animal rights over the last few years. The past two decades have seen a 43% decline in the world’s lion population, spurring fears that the animal is in danger of extinction. There are now only 20,000 lions left in Africa, from a high of 200,000 at the beginning of the 20th century.


For Bubye, hunting is not the only thing threatening the species. Maintaining a viable ecosystem in which they can thrive is also a big challenge.


“The fact remains that habitat destruction is their biggest enemy, and there is basically no more space in Africa for a new viable population of lions,” Leathem says.

http://qz.com/622866/a-zimbabwean-park-denies-reports-that-it-wants-to-shoot-its-lions/
 
http://voices.nationalgeographic.co...-conserve-a-hard-truth-for-lion-conservation/

The National Post recently reported that management from Zimbabwe’s Bubye Valley Conservancy was considering a controversial move to cull upwards of 200 lions out of a rough population of 500 in order to ensure the reserve’s wildlife biodiversity.

It was also reported that since the growing calls to end trophy hunting, due in large part to the killing of Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe’s Hwange National Park last year, conservancies like Bubye are no longer seeing the funding necessary to adequately cover conservation costs, which includes fence maintenance, financing local schools and health clinics, and providing meat to local people.

Given the many challenges conservationists face in Africa, coupled with culling and trophy hunting being such contentious issues, I decided to reach out to Dr. Byron du Preez, a Bubye Valley Conservancy project leader and member of the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), in the Department of Zoology at Oxford University.

Specifically, I was hoping for clearer answers regarding the potential paradox that increasing calls for hunting bans in Africa have on existing lion populations, and how that may be playing out within the recent culling conundrum.

Fortunately, Du Preez went one step further by clearing up what was initially reported, clarifying the proposed cull, explaining how culling works, and elaborating on the dangers of promoting single species management.

The following is his official statement:

Clarification on the Proposed Lion Cull

I am an independent scientist working on the Bubye Valley Conservancy, focused on lion ecology, which actually means just about every aspect of the ecosystem, such is the influence that lions have. I am neither pro- nor anti-hunting. I simply focus on practical conservation solutions that actually work in the real world.

We are hopeful that we will be able to translocate some lions, although all previous attempts to translocate lions out of the Bubye Valley Conservancy have been derailed by factors entirely out of our control. However, if the species was in as much trouble as the sensationalist reports like to focus on, one would think that it would be a lot easier to find new homes for these magnificent animals than it actually is.


‘There is basically no more space left in Africa for a new viable population of lions.’

The fact remains that habitat destruction is their biggest enemy, and there is basically no more space left in Africa for a new viable population of lions.

A portrait of an African lion (Panthera leo). Photograph by Chris Johns/National Geographic Creative.
A portrait of an African lion (Panthera leo). Photograph by Chris Johns/National Geographic Creative.

The Science of Culling

A cull is not a once-off fix (neither is translocation, nor contraception), but would be more of an ongoing management operation conducted on an annual basis. When given adequate space, resources, and protection, lion populations can explode, such as they have done on the Bubye Valley Conservancy.

Reducing numbers to alleviate overpopulation pressure does nothing to permanently solve the problem, nor halts the species’ breeding potential; [it] only slows it down for a relatively short time until their population growth returns to the exponential phase once again.

Culling is a management tool that may be used for many species. That includes: elephants, lions, kangaroos, and deer, basically animals that have very little natural control mechanisms other than disease and starvation, and that are now bounded by human settlements and live in smaller areas than they did historically.

As responsible wildlife managers who have a whole ecosystem full of animals to conserve (not just lions), we have therefore discussed culling as an option for controlling the lion population, but have agreed that, for now, this is not necessary just yet and we will continue to try and translocate these animals until our hand is forced.

As already mentioned, there is very little space left in Africa that can have lions but doesn’t already. Also, where lions do occur, especially in parks and private wildlife areas, they often exist at higher densities than they ever did historically.

This is mainly due to augmented surface water supply resulting in greater numbers of non-migratory prey that now no longer limit lion nutrition and energy availability, allowing the lion population to rapidly expand.

For example, successful hunting to feed cubs all the way through to adulthood and independence is one of the greatest stresses for a lion, and often results in dead cubs and reduced population growth. In turn, a high density of lions can severely reduce the density of their prey, ultimately leading to the death of the lions via disease and starvation—far more horrific than humane culling operations conducted by professionals.

The Dangers of Single Species Management

Lions are the apex predator wherever they occur, and as such exert a level of top-down control on the rest of the ecosystem. Lions prey on a wide variety of species, and we are starting to see declines in even the more common and robust prey such as zebra and wildebeest—not to mention the more sensitive species such as sable, kudu, nyala, warthog, and even buffalo and giraffe.

Apart from their prey, lions are aggressively competitive and will go out of their way to kill any leopard, cheetah, wild dog, or hyena that they encounter, and have caused major declines in these species, not just on the Bubye Valley Conservancy, but elsewhere in Africa where lion densities are high.

According to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), cheetah are listed as vulnerable, and wild dogs are endangered.

It is easy to simply focus on the number of lions remaining in Africa that has fallen steeply over the last century from ~100,000 to ~20,000 today, but which is directly linked to the reduction in available habitat.

Simply focusing on increasing the abundance of one species at the cost of another cannot be considered a conservation success—assuming that holistic conservation for the benefit of the entire ecosystem is the end goal—no matter how iconic that species is.

Luckily, lions kill lions, resulting in more lion mortality than any other species—including man on the Bubye Valley Conservancy—and in an ideal world the lion population would level off at a putative carrying capacity where lions control their own numbers (deaths from conflict equal or exceed new births). However, it is possible and probable (man-made water points increase the carrying capacity of — and therefore also the competition and conflict between — all wildlife species) that this would still be at the cost of certain other sensitive species.

Ecosystem stability is related to size (and conversely ecosystem sensitivity is inversely related to size) and smaller areas need to control their lion numbers a lot more carefully than large areas such as the Bubye Valley Conservancy, which is over 3,000 square kilometres [1,160 square miles]. In fact, small reserves in South Africa alone culled over 200 lions in total between 2010 and 2012 ,according to the 2013 report from the Lion Management Forum workshop.

Understanding Carrying Capacity

The Bubye Valley Conservancy does not rely on trophy hunting to manage the lion population. I will discuss the economics of hunting in brief. The most recent and robust lion population survey data calculate a current lion population on the Bubye Valley Conservancy of between 503 and 552 lions (it is impossible to get a 100 percent accurate count on the exact lion number — which also changes daily with births and deaths).

Carrying capacity is an extremely fluid concept, and changes monthly, seasonally, and annually depending on all sorts of factors including rainfall, disease (of both predator and prey), and economics.

It is estimated that 500 lions eat more than U.S. $2.4 million each year (the meat value used is a very conservative $3 per kg – compare that to the price of steak in a supermarket, and then remember that the Bubye Valley Conservancy used to be a cattle-ranching area, and if wildlife becomes unviable, then there is no reason not to convert it back to a cattle ranching area once again).

A male lion (Panthera leo) guards a zebra carcass. Photograph by James P. Blair/National Geographic Creative.
A male lion (Panthera leo) guards a zebra carcass. Photograph by James P. Blair/National Geographic Creative.

To give the question of carrying capacity a fair, if necessarily vague, answer, I would personally estimate that the upper carrying capacity of lions on the Bubye Valley Conservancy would be around 500 animals—assuming that they are allowed to be hunted and therefore generate the revenue to offset the cost of their predation.

Remember, lion numbers can get out of hand. And if there was no predation, then thousands upon thousands of zebra and wildebeest and impala would need to be culled to prevent them from over grazing the habitat, leading to soil erosion, starvation, and disease.

The ecosystem is a very complex machine and whether anyone likes it or not, humans have intervened with cities, roads, dams, pumped water, fences, and livestock. The only way to mitigate that intervention is by further, more focused, and carefully considered intervention, for the sake of the entire ecosystem.

It is important to bear in mind that the wildlife here, and in the majority of other wildlife areas in Africa (hunting areas exceed the total area conserved by Africa’s national parks by more than 20 percent), does not exist as our, or anyone else’s, luxury.

The Bubye Valley Conservancy is a privately owned wildlife area, or to put it another way, it is a business. The fact that it is a well-run business is the reason why it is one of the greatest conservation successes in Africa, converting from cattle to wildlife in 1994 (only 22 years ago) and now hosting Zimbabwe’s largest contiguous lion population at one of the highest densities in Africa, as well as the third largest black rhino population in the world (after Kruger and Etosha).

This is only possible because it is a business, and is self-sufficient in generating the funds to maintain fences, roads, pay staff, manage the wildlife, pump water, and support the surrounding communities—all extremely necessary factors involved in keeping wildlife alive in Africa.

Michael Schwartz is a freelance journalist and African wildlife conservation researcher. He is also an honorary member of the Jane Goodall Institute and International Institute for Environment and Development’s Uganda Poverty Conservation Learning Group.
 
Saying the deaths of these lions lies at the feet of misguided conservationists is a bit of a stretch if I read the article right. The lions would have died at the hands of hunters regardless, the only difference being the hunter would have paid for the privilege.

which would have put close to 10 million into the local economy. now they get nothing.

gunguy: they can only relocate them if there are other places that will take them. what do you think will happen if no other game preserves will take them ?
 
Why don't they issue cheap permits to hunt the lions? add a little incentive to get hunters back in. I'd pay 5K, not 50K, and I don't need a guide just a map with where i'm able to hunt........... Bet it would sell out overnight. 200x5000 = 1million plus other revenue from lodging, food, truck rentals etc, and they only have to provide maps. Would sell out in short order I think.
As the govt tried screwing over the Dentist, the 5K would be paid after the lion hit the ground..... They can stew in their own feces otherwise!
 
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