The horrific killing of the
magnificent, black-maned lion Cecil by an American trophy hunter in
Zimbabwe highlights the little-known plight of his species. Lion
populations are in free fall, and we are losing this iconic species in
most of its range. Only two centuries ago, hundreds of thousands of
lions inhabited Africa. Today there are perhaps 20,000 of the big cats, living in 8 percent of their former range.
Trophy hunting is legal in Zimbabwe—although Cecil’s killing was a particularly repugnant case, in which many laws
were apparently broken. Infuriating as trophy hunting may be, it is
just one issue. Dozens of lions are killed each week by rural Africans
in defense of their domestic cattle, goats, and camels. Many more cats
die in wire snares and iron traps. Mostly laid to catch herbivores for
the massive trade in wild bushmeat, illegal traps are a twofold blow for
lions. Poaching devastates the wild prey that sustains lion
populations. And drawn in by the distress calls of dying ungulates,
lions are then captured in nearby snares themselves, where they die
prolonged, ghastly deaths. As wildebeest, zebras, and antelope decline
from poaching, lions resort to killing livestock, further fueling
retaliatory killing by herders and ranchers.
There is a way to break this relentless cycle. We at Panthera, a
big-cat conservation organization, hire locals to protect both livestock
and lions. Their first job is to find lions. They do so either
by the traditional method of following fresh tracks, or we train them
to be para-biologists, skilled in the use of technologies like radio
collars and camera traps, motion-triggered cameras that photograph lions
and other wildlife as they pass by. Our lion guards keep tabs on big
cats so they can chase them away from villages and communities or direct
herders to graze their stock elsewhere. We also equip lion guards with
training, tools, and funding to reinforce the corrals where livestock is
kept overnight, when lions do most of their hunting. The lion guards
provide free labor to community members, either improving traditional bomas
made with local acacia thorn trees or building entirely new corrals
fortified with chain-link fencing and sturdy poles. The new corrals work
particularly well to protect large herds where the traditional acacia
model is hard-pressed to contain 200 or 300 head of panicked cattle.
Addressing the underlying reasons that compel pastoralists to hate
lions dramatically reduces their inclination to resort to bullets or
poison. We went from 20 dead lions in 2013 to only one last year when we
launched the program in a particularly bad conflict hot spot in
northern Namibia. In communities adjacent to Zimbabwe’s magnificent
Hwange National Park, where Cecil lived, only nine lion guards working
with Panthera’s partners, Oxford University’s Hwange Lion Project,
managed to reduce the number of killed cattle from 260 in 2010 to 73 by
2014. Living lions are the reason that we employ people—no lions, no
jobs—giving people in local communities further incentive to tolerate
big cats.
Tackling the issue of poaching is a more formidable challenge. Lion
guards help by removing snares and discouraging people from setting them
at all, but that is a stopgap. Many of Africa’s vast national parks and
game reserves are desperately under-resourced—which is part of the
reason their governments resort to trophy hunting to generate
much-needed revenue for anti-poaching patrols. The solution is clear:
more park guards, equipment, and training. Panthera and similar
organizations are providing these things, but Africa’s protected areas
are colossal, some the size of small countries, so protection is
expensive and daunting. It will take a global response—the kind of
worldwide reaction we have seen to the death of Cecil—to summon the
funding and political action required to curtail poaching. If we fail,
top carnivores such as the lion will be first species to vanish but not
the last. Just as with overhunted tropical forests around the world,
there are already large tracts of African savanna emptied of wildlife by
human hunters.
Cecil would still be alive if trophy hunting had been outlawed, and
perhaps this will now happen, if the global outrage over his death is
any indication. However, Cecil’s species will continue to disappear
unless the world supports Africa’s governments with the tremendous
resources they need to secure the huge, iconic landscapes that still
have lions, and the continent’s rural, livestock-owning communities in
their daily efforts to live among these great cats.
Luke Hunter is the president of Panthera. He has been working to conserve Africa’s big cats for more than two decades and has written 140 scientific papers on wild cats.
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