Bubye Valley
Conservancy says it may have to cull 200 lions due to overpopulation and
"the Cecil effect"
By Peta
Thornycroft in Bubye Valley Conservancy ,
Zimbabwe
20 Feb 2016
It is the
country where Cecil the lion was killed, sparking international anger against
the American dentist who shot him.
The outcry
over Walter Palmer’s killing of Cecil drove other big-game
hunters away from Zimbabwe, fearful they too would attract the opprobrium of
the public. But in what is being described as a side-effect of the affair, Zimbabwe ’s
largest wildlife area says it now finds itself suffering from an overpopulation
of lions.
Bubye Valley
Conservancy has more than 500 lions, the largest number in Zimbabwe ’s
diminishing wildlife areas.
It has warned
that its lion population has become unsustainable and that it may even have to
cull around 200 as a result of what is being called “the Cecil effect”.
Now Bubye is
appealing for other institutions or wildlife sanctuaries to take some of its
lions.
Conservationists
estimate about half of Zimbabwe ’s
wildlife has disappeared since Robert Mugabe’s seizure of white-owned land
began in 2000, but Bubye has held on by attracting wealthy hunters whose fees
support its wildlife work.
But last year’s
shooting of Cecil, in a conservancy bordering Hwange National Park , sparked a huge backlash against big-game hunting.
Plummeting oil
prices have further led to a drop in the number of visitors from US states such
as Texas , from where traditionally large
numbers of hunters go to Zimbabwe .
Bubye’s lions
are decimating populations of antelope, along with other animals such as
giraffe, cheetah, leopards and wild dogs, after the driest summer on record
kept grasses low and made the small game easy targets.
Blondie
Leathem, general manager of Bubye Valley Conservancy, said: “I wish we could
give about 200 of our lions away to ease the overpopulation. 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.”
In the Forties,
there were thought to be as many as 450,000 lions on Earth, but today they are
classed as “vulnerable”, with numbers feared as low as 20,000.
Conservationists
fear that without a concerted push, particularly in high-risk areas of central
and west Africa, their numbers could halve again in the next two decades
because of human-animal conflict and reduced habit and food supplies.
Bubye, along
with some game parks in neighbouring countries, has been bucking the trend,
according to a recent study, with healthy lion populations in “small, fenced,
intensively managed, funded reserves”.
The
conservation area was founded 22 years ago by Charles Davy, the rancher father
ofChelsy Davy, Prince Harry’s former girlfriend. It is now
majority-owned by Dubai World, the investment fund of the wealthy emirate’s
government.
Millions of
pounds were spent fencing 2,000 square miles of land previously cleared of
wildlife by decades of cattle farming. The fence was then electrified and
hundreds of people were hired to protect wildlife imported to the park.
Bubye also
supports schools and clinics in several districts and provides meat every month
for people nearby.
When the
Telegraph visited Bubye in early February a matriarch lioness called Matilda,
her sisters and her latest litter of cubs were lazing in the shade under mopane
trees.
Matilda – which
was fitted with a radio collar by the Oxford University
researchers that also collared Cecil – eats at least 10lb of meat every day.
Pieter Kat,
director of Lion Aid, a UK-based charity, said contraception should have been
introduced at the conservancy years ago. “It’s too late now,” he said. “There
is nowhere in Africa which could take so many
lions.”
Paul Bartels, a
wildlife scientist from South
Africa ’s Tshwane University of Technology,
said female contraceptive implants used in smaller reserves would be
impractical for Matilda’s clan.
“There are a
lot of lions on that [Bubye] conservancy. It would cost hundreds of thousands
of dollars for contraception to make any real difference,” he said.
Oxford’s lion research project in
Zimbabwe, which monitored Cecil, said that the Bubye conservancy was “a
huge success story” in a region blighted by a lack of governmental help for its
struggling wildlife sector.
Mr Leathem
insisted he was not a hunter but a conservationist, and had no option but to
maintain “sustainable” hunting to safeguard Bubye’s future.
Source: 'Cecil effect’ leaves park’s lion at risk of cull (21/02/16)
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