Threats to Lions & Lion Conservation

Information and Discussions on Endangered Species
User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26619
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Toko »

Who would buy lions except for hunting 0: and if the lion is killed the gene pool does not matter ;-)


User avatar
Lisbeth
Site Admin
Posts: 67733
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:31 pm
Country: Switzerland
Location: Lugano
Contact:

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Lisbeth »

We are not supposed to meddle with wild animals, as it changes their natural development! Good as it might sound it always ends up being wrong in the long run.


"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
User avatar
Toko
Posts: 26619
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:29 pm
Country: -

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Toko »

Is South Africa Seeking to Downlist Lions in Order to Trade Lion Bones?

by Adam Cruise, Courtesy of Conservation Action Trust

South Africa’s Department of Environmental Affairs has released for public comment its first-ever Biodiversity Management Plan for lions, panthera leo.
The main purpose of the proposed plan is outlined in the government’s vision for the South African lion population. “Through the existence of stable, viable and ecologically functional populations of managed and wild lions, along with well-managed captive populations that have minimal negative conservation impacts, lions will provide key opportunities for biodiversity conservation, economic development, social benefits and improved management capacity.”

This counter-trend, says the Biodiversity Management Plan, is “because all lions in South Africa are within largely adequately fenced reserves with sufficient management budgets…” As a result, most of the threats faced by other African lions “are not relevant to lions here.”While African range lions have declined over the last several decades, especially in west and east Africa and in southern Africa, where they were extirpated from most of their range by the 1900s, South Africa’s lion populations have not only stabilized but are increasing – by 30 percent over the last three decades.

Although wild lion population numbers are dropping across the continent, the Department of Environmental Affairs recommends that lions in South Africa be downgraded on the IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species from the current classification of Vulnerable to extinction to a classification of Least Concern.

Dr. Pieter Kat a trustee with LionAid, a UK charity working globally to save lions, is critical of the management plan.

“This is clearly to facilitate trade, to the detriment of wild lions in South Africa.”

There are currently 2,300 wild lions in the various national parks and 800 “managed wild” lions in smaller reserves, according to the Biodiversity Management Plan.

The plan recommends the downlisting because there are about 1,600 mature individual lions in South Africa, and it maintains that when the population of mature wild lions tops 1,500 individuals, the IUCN’s Red List should change the status of the species.

But South Africa does not know how many wild lions there are, says Dr. Kat. The last lion survey was in Kruger National Park in 2005/2006, so that data is now almost 10 years old.

“You cannot use it in any management plan as it is well beyond the ‘sell by’ date,” he said.

The Biodiversity Management Plan notes that there are around 6,000 captive-bred lions throughout the country, bred “exclusively to generate money” and that the captive breeding and subsequent release for hunting of captive bred lions remains legal.

South Africa is the only country in the world that has three classifications for lions: wild, managed wild and captive bred.

“The management of these lions,” says the Department of Environmental Affairs, “is challenging, with high growth rates necessitating appropriate population regulation.”

Dr. Kat said, “It’s is a pure attempt at manipulation of statistics to justify a commercial end.”

Asian traders started taking an interest in South African lions in 2008, when the decline in tiger numbers became acute. In traditional Chinese medicine, tiger wine and cake, made using powdered bones, allegedly cures many ills including ulcers, cramp, rheumatism, stomach ache and malaria.

Lion bones are now filling the gap and, according to the Biodiversity Management Plan, there is a sharp increase in lion products sold in Vietnam, Laos and China.

The agency says 739 kilograms of lion bones were legally traded to Asia in 2012 as compared to just 55 kilograms the year before.

The Biodiversity Management Plan views a legal trade in lion bones as an economically viable activity and hopes to “promote sustainable legal trade in lions and lion products” using a regulated permit system.

The sale of lion products, especially lion bones, offers breeders a way of boosting their earnings. A breeder can get paid anywhere from US$5,000 to US$25,000 per lion shot, but can boost his earnings by selling a lion skeleton, worth between $1,000 and $2,000 to a Chinese dealer in Durban or Johannesburg.

The skeleton, once boiled down and bottled in Asia could reach a value exceeding US$20,000.

Dr. Kat maintains that “by stimulating an Asian market for lion products, increased demand will affect lions across the continent as they now have value for poachers.”

He points out that there is already significant evidence that lions are being poached for their skins and bones in Zimbabwe and Tanzania, and trophy hunting operators outside South Africa have already been approached to sell the lion bones.

He says it is a short step from there to middlemen arranging for communities to poach and sell lion bones.


User avatar
Lisbeth
Site Admin
Posts: 67733
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:31 pm
Country: Switzerland
Location: Lugano
Contact:

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Lisbeth »

The Government must be in desperate need of money 0*\ :evil: :evil:


"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
User avatar
Flutterby
Posts: 44150
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:28 pm
Country: South Africa
Location: Gauteng, South Africa
Contact:

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Flutterby »

Probably because they pocket all the money from the honest tax payers and build their homes with it! O/ O/


User avatar
Mel
Global Moderator
Posts: 28314
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:31 pm
Country: Germany
Location: Föhr
Contact:

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Mel »

Desperate times indeed...
Dr. Kat maintains that “by stimulating an Asian market for lion products, increased demand will affect lions across the continent as they now have value for poachers.”
Doesn't it all sound just too familiar 0- 0- 0-


God put me on earth to accomplish a certain amount of things. Right now I'm so far behind that I'll never die.
User avatar
Flutterby
Posts: 44150
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:28 pm
Country: South Africa
Location: Gauteng, South Africa
Contact:

Re: Biodiversity Management Plan for Lions up for Public Com

Post by Flutterby »

And as usual it's the "Asian market"!!! O/ O/ O/ O/


User avatar
Lisbeth
Site Admin
Posts: 67733
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:31 pm
Country: Switzerland
Location: Lugano
Contact:

After genocide lions are returning to Rwanda

Post by Lisbeth »

After genocide lions are returning to Rwanda

Image

Seven lions, two males and five females, are being transported from South Africa and will arrive by air in Rwanda on Monday, where they will be taken and released after a two-week quarantine into the eastern Akagera National Park.

Lions will return to Rwanda for the first time in more than two decades after the endangered animal was wiped out in Rwanda's human genocide.

Lions in Rwanda were wiped out during the 1994 genocide, which left an estimated 800,000 people dead.

Fleeing refugees and displaced people occupied part of the park, with the lion being driven out or killed as people tried to protect their livestock.

As part of preparations for the re-introduction, the Akagera park team worked with nearby communities to promote harmonious co-existence with lions.

The lions are coming from "relatively small, confined reserves where it is necessary to occasionally remove surplus lions" in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province.

The western African lion subpopulation is listed as "critically endangered" due to over-hunting and dwindling prey.


"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
User avatar
Flutterby
Posts: 44150
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 12:28 pm
Country: South Africa
Location: Gauteng, South Africa
Contact:

Re: After genocide lions are returning to Rwanda

Post by Flutterby »

Some good news for a change. \O


User avatar
Richprins
Committee Member
Posts: 76216
Joined: Sat May 19, 2012 3:52 pm
Location: NELSPRUIT
Contact:

Re: After genocide lions are returning to Rwanda

Post by Richprins »

Wonder if this is the correct subspecies? --00--


Please check Needs Attention pre-booking: https://africawild-forum.com/viewtopic.php?f=322&t=596
Post Reply

Return to “Endangered Species”