December 7, 2012
Should Trophy Hunting of Lions Be Banned?

Their numbers are declining, but lions remain a legal target of trophy hunters in Africa. Big males, like this one, are potential trophies. Photo courtesy of Flickr user suburbanchicken.
Nowhere in the world is it legal to hunt wild tigers, as each remaining subspecies of the giant cat is infamously on the verge of extinction.
Yet the close cousin of the tiger, the lion—almost equally large, equally charismatic and, in places, equally threatened—is legally killed by trophy hunters across its shrinking African range. The remaining lion population, centered in eastern and southern Africa, has declined by as much as 30 percent in the past 20 years, and the cats are considered seriously imperiled. Yet every year 600 lions fall to the bullets of licensed and legal tourists on safari hunts. The activity is opposed by many, but those in favor argue that trophy hunting of lions and other prized targets generates employment and revenue for local economies. The Huffington Post ran an editorial in March 2011 in which the author—lion researcher Luke Hunter—condemned the act of shooting a big cat but still argued that lion hunting is an important tool in generating revenue for land preservation. The author reported that trophy-hunting tourists may pay $125,000 in fees and guide services for the privilege of killing a lion, and he questioned the wisdom in protecting the animals under the Endangered Species Act, an action the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering. A hunter’s organization called Conservation Force also makes the case on its website that African “tourist safari hunting” benefits land, wildlife and communities while imparting “no detrimental biological impact.”
But a report published in 2011 says otherwise—that the environmental and economic benefits of trophy hunting in Africa are negligible. The paper, produced by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, states that in 11 sub-Saharan countries that allow trophy hunting of large game, 272 million acres—or 15 percent of the land—is open to the sport. However, returns from trophy hunting are dismal. While hunters in Africa kill, in addition to lions, 800 leopards, 640 elephants and more than 3,000 water buffalo each year, among other species, they leave behind only 44 cents per acre of hunting land. In Tanzania, that figure is much smaller—a per-acre benefit of less than two cents. A closer look by the report’s authors at seven of the 11 countries—Namibia, Tanzania, Botswana, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Burkina Faso and Benin—revealed that trophy hunting employs not even 10,000 people on a permanent and part-time basis. About 100 million people live in these seven nations.
The IUCN’s report points out that since the economic benefits of trophy hunting appear to be virtually nil in Africa, the only way hunting can be used as a conservation tool is by allowing it as part of carefully designed conservation strategies. Which beckons the question: What species are to gain by hunters prowling their habitat? Certainly, in some cases of overpopulation—usually of grazing herd animals—hunting can serve a direct purpose and even benefit ecosystems. Even elephants are widely said to be overpopulated in certain locations and in need of intervention via rifles.

Female and juvenile lions are off-limits to hunters, but whole prides may be impacted when trophy hunters remove the most powerful breeding males from a population. Photo courtesy of Flickr user kibuyu.
But for lions, can the intentional removal of any animals from remaining populations be tolerated? Their numbers are crashing from historic levels. Lions once occurred in most of Africa, southern Europe, the Arabian peninsula and southern Asia as far east as India. But nation by nation, lions have disappeared. In Greece, they were gone by A.D. 100. In the 1100s, lions vanished from Palestine. The species’ greatest decline occurred in the 20th century, when Syria, Iran and Iraq saw their last lions die. In 1950, there may have been 400,000 left in the wild; by 1975, perhaps only 200,000. By the 1990s, their numbers had been halved again. Today, an isolated population in the Gir Forest of India numbers more than 400 and seems even to be growing. But the current African population of 32,000 to 35,000 is declining fast. (Defenders of Wildlife has estimated that not even 21,000 lions remain.) In Kenya, the situation is dire: In 2009, wildlife officials guessed they were losing about 100 lions per year in a national population of just 2,000 and that they might be extinct within 20 years. The causes are multiple but related; loss of habitat and decline of prey species are huge factors which, in turn, mean increased lion conflicts with livestock herders—and, often, dead lions; and as numbers drop, the gene pool is dwindling, causing inbreeding and weakened immune systems. Disease outbreaks have also had devastating impacts.
Then there is trophy hunting, which may remove powerful breeding males from a population. David Youldon, the chief operating officer of the conservation group Lion Alert, said in an e-mail that no existing lion population needs culling. The only potential benefit from hunting could come as revenue for land preservation and local communities—but this, he says, isn’t happening.
“Hunting has the potential to generate conservation benefits, but the industry needs a complete overhaul, improved regulation and greater benefit to Africa if such benefits are to be realized, and I see little motivation within the industry to make those changes,” he wrote.
Incredibly, as lions disappear, tourists spur the decline; they may still shoot lions in Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Ethiopia also allows very limited hunting. Fifty-three percent of the cats are taken by Americans, according to Lion Alert, which has reviewed the IUCN’s report and warns on its website that the societal benefits of hunting in most of Africa are so minimal that the activity, in effect, creates little or no impetus to preserve land for the activity, maintain populations of target animals or stop poaching.
So what can travelers do to help? Take more pictures, perhaps. “Photographic tourism” generates 39 times the permanent employment that trophy hunting does, the IUCN report says, while protected lands generate on average two times the tourist revenue per acre as do hunting reserves. That is still just pennies—but at least it leaves the lions alive.

A male lion naps as a safari jeep’s spotlight illuminates it for photographers, which reportedly generate almost two times the revenue per acre of land as do trophy hunters. Photo courtesy of Flickr user russelljsmith.
Other Big Cats to Protect—and See While You Can:
Tiger. Since 1900, tiger numbers from Turkey to Malaysia have dropped by 95 percent. Today, between 4,000 and 7,000 remain, and the outlook is grim. The largest population lives in India, where tourists have the best chance at seeing wild tigers in Ranthambore National Park, Kanha National Park and Bandhavgarh National Park.
Cheetah. The world’s fastest land animal once lived in 44 countries in Asia and Africa, with a population of possibly 100,000. Today, most cheetahs live in Africa, where numbers are down to as low as 10,000. A gene pool bottleneck thousands of years ago has left a legacy of inbreeding, one of the major threats to the cheetah’s survival. For now, an excellent place to see cheetahs is Kafue National Park, in Zambia.
Snow Leopard. The granite-colored snow leopard of the Himalaya numbers possibly 6,000 in 12 nations, but, like most wild cats, the snow leopard is disappearing. Trekkers in the Himalaya (PDF) have the best chance, though unlikely, of catching a glimpse.
Clouded Leopard. Perhaps the most mysterious of the big cats—and definitely the smallest—the clouded leopard ranges from Tibet through southern China and south through the islands of Malaysia and Indonesia. The animals weigh just 30 to 50 pounds and spend much of their time in trees. The current population is unknown but believed to be less than 10,000 individuals and shrinking. Seeing clouded leopards is rare—and we may take satisfaction simply in knowing that this beautiful creature exists.

The endangered snow leopard, a resident of the Himilayas, is rarely seen in the wild. This one lives in a zoo. Photo courtesy of Flickr user Tambako the Jaguar.
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The only safaris that should take place for ANY animal should be of the photographic kind!
Trophy hunting is barbaric and should be banned. That simple, that plain.
The biggest issue with trophy hunting is that it goes entirely against nature. The way nature works is that the predators weed out the weakest/dumbest/slowest animals from the prey population. That action improves the herd overall by stripping it of animals that would never have mated and only served to slow the herd down. Those that survive for a long time pass down healthy and strong genes.
Trophy hunting instead focuses on the opposite, where killing a very healthy and strong animal is applauded. What happens when a pride leading lion is killed? Tourists just showing up aren’t going to know, and it shows. Work will have to be done and it will have to be intense, because with the current rate of decline, most of these awesome predators will be dead to the wild, to be held only in zoos, which would be a shame indeed.
It’s incredible that “civilized” people could continue to do that!!! under the cover “to help Africa??!? What a bad, cynical joke! The only shooting has to be there from cameras. Help Africa by suporting all the people who try to preserve animals hunted and whom vital perimeter becames every day smaller and smaller! It’s not enough that Masaï people still hunt male lions to becam themselfs men??? And we have to respect that in order to save some other species!!Hunting is imoral and trophy hunting is an barbaric activity and it’s a shame not to ban it!
Every time a gun is fired by hunters and their `crew`it must upset the animals within it`s range and have a detrimental effect on the behaviour of every living thing in the area, no animals, no grazing, loss of habitat – the effects go on and on.
I was absolutely unaware that trophy hunting was legally allowed! It’s horrifying. Just the other day, someone on my fb made a joke of wishing he could hunt all big cats—it was so very upsetting. Why is there no public furor against it?
Also, surely the gene-pool is depleted by taking out the powerful breeding male in the pride? How can the evolution of “survival of the fittest” be achieved if we shoot them down?
It’s regrettable that big cat trophy hunters are allowed to exist.
relocating the elephants to areas that are low in numbers would seem to be a logical idea instead of shooting a dwindling population,stopping hunting would also increase the population of all the animals in the areas mentioned as well as adjacent areas with the benefits of a healthy eco-system as well.
These beatiful creatures that belong to God should be enjoy by watching them and there beauty. No way should they be hunted and killed. These are God’s Creatures and they were not put on earht to kill them. They have no voice and it is up to the Good People to make sure they speak for them.
Good article. One thing though, lions have been off licence for some years in Botswana, and in 2011 leopards were removed as well, and this year PREsident Khama announced the banning of all hunting as of 2014. Good leadership helps.
I own guns and enjoy target shooting.
Trophy hunting should remain legal. However, you should only be allowed to use a spear. Then it’s fair. Using a rifle against an animal for a trophy isn’t hunting, it;s shopping.
John, you said, “Trophy hunting should remain legal. However, you should only be allowed to use a spear. Then it’s fair.”
I understand your thinking, John. However, this is not a sporting match in which fairness is at the heart of the matter. Lions in Africa are tentatively scheduled for extinction at the rate they’re declining. Bullet, arrow, spear, brass knuckles–it doesn’t matter how the trophy hunter kills the cat. Lions cannot afford being killed at all right now.
Another valid question is: Why in the world does anyone need to kill a lion?
I am of the opinion that when anyone has the need to kill an animal it is usually about control, power, and ego.These trophy killings or any killings of wild animals should have a higher monetary fine along with a jail time penalty, and time served should not be in one of our (condo) jails but in the country they’re killing animals in!God created these animals and put them in our care, now what’s the right thing to do.
Yes no more hunting kitty cats MEOW!
It think that the killing of the animals should not allowed these animals are already endangered . These creatures are amazing animals with the most beautiful coats but I don’t like that the fact that people kill them for it . Me I love lions but the killing just has to end or else the world will never see lions in the future.
they’re losing their populations because how popular animals get once someone hears how good they’re qualities are they think they need that and hunters kill way too much they shouldn’t even try going after tigers and lions; THEYER TWICE THE SIZE ON US; they can do more harm then we think no one knows unless you witness it or something. I don’t think hunting SHOULD be legal, cause what it it was the other way around where we are all dying day after day ,losing friends and families and (I know it’s not on this topic but) even places to live! Hunting should not be legal and taking pictures don’t help one little bit.
No animal should be a trophy hunt….
I want to know what Africa is going to doin 20 years when all the big game is gone and no one wants to come to those dustbowl countries. They are going to lose all their tourism money because they allowed people with too much time and money to kill everything. Come on people it’s about to be 2013, hunting is a tried ass, barbaric sport. What I want to know is does it ever occurred to hunters that they may be killings someone’s mom or dad? In turn that can certainly kill the cub as well. It’s not Just the animals llife they are taking, but that of many more unintentional. One day in most of our lifetime, I truly believe the only way one will see these beautiful animals is in the zoo.
I notice many readers seem outraged by simply “hunting.” I think it’s very important to recognize the difference between hunting animals like deer, moose, pigs, waterfowl and others for food and animals like bears, elephants, sharks and big cats for trophies. (Note that food hunters still may put an antler rack on their wall, and note that trophy hunters may eat a cougar steak to give some appearance of integrity to their actions.) Trophy hunting is the focus of this story, and trophy hunters are ones hunting lions.
This illustrates how the pro-trophy hunting industry’s claim that they help in conservation is nothing but hogwash! All they are interested is boasting of their ‘hunt’ and showing off their trophy.
any hunting of animals is not right, especially when their numbers of dwendling, it is cruel and heart breaking
What a question?
Off course it should be stopped.
Complaining against trophy hunting is not enough. Let’s have some feasible suggestions of how we can turn the tide and find another exciting use for trophy hunters’ guns, without killing the animals. Perhaps, they may be trained to help rangers dart the animals and if they succeed, they could take home an artificial replica trophy of their “kill”. Surely, being able to boast at home that they have been influential in the preservation of wildlife rather than reducing it, must be much more appealing to some of their friends? This may sound childish but something will have to be done sooner rather than later.
I don’t see a problem with hunting as long as the humans play by the same rules as the animals: you only bring to the table what nature gave you. So, for the humans: a supposedly superior intellect. And for the lions: teeth, claws, speed, and muscle.
There is no justification whatsoever for killing lions – or any other threatened animal for that matter – in the name of sport/fun. The revenue generated is negligible and only short-lived considering that the practice can easily wipe out their population. And knowing the levels of corruption in most African countries, most of the revenue generated from sport hunting benefits only a few powerful individuals, not the larger society.
Photographic safaris are more sustainable and beneficial to everyone – more employment opportunities, long term viability, etc. If the main concern is conservation and population control, governments and conservation agencies can work together to relocate lions from areas where they are overpopulated to other areas where they are needed and where they can survive and thrive, if they have the will and desire. It can be done, and has been done in the past, even though at a small scale. e.g the recent re-introduction of lions to the Majete reserve in Malawi.
No animal lover should travel to countries allowing hunting of lions. Cat lovers unite, let’s go to Kenya and boycott countries where hunting for fun is allowed.
I would LOVE nothing more than to sit down with a so called “man” who is a lion hunter and ask them what kind of satisfaction they get from shooting a lion. Does it make them feel more like a man? Because they hide behind a gun? ???
I would love to see them go head to head with a lion with NO GUN – bare hands. I’ll break out the popcorn for that one.