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What’s worse: to hunt a lion in Africa or not to care about Africa except when someone hunts a lion?
ideas.aeon.co ^ | 29 July, 2015 | Brigid Hains

Posted on 07/30/2015 7:15:24 PM PDT by marktwain

The meaning of an individual animal

Among the reasons not to feel outraged about the killing of Cecil the lion are these two: he had a human name and he was a well-known tourist attraction. I say ‘tourist attraction’ instead of 'beloved lion’ because that hackneyed phrase seems to me a concept empty of meaning. How can a lion be wild and be 'beloved’ by people who saw him once from a safari jeep? You don’t earn the right to 'love’ a lion that way. Cecil was a wild lion who was habituated to humans, collared for a biology study, long-lived and good looking. All those factors have been offered as intensifiers of emotion in the reaction to his killing, but not one of them seems a good reason to care more about this individual lion than any other.

'Cecil’ isn’t the first lion to die when he ventured outside the Hwange National Park. In fact you could argue that a lion of his age has done extremely well to stay alive this long. In a study conducted between 1996 and 2004, 24 out of 62 tagged lions in the Hwange study area were shot dead by sport hunters. Each year around 250 lions are killed - legally - across Africa by trophy-hunters, most of them foreigners who pay staggering amounts of money for the privilege of flying home with a lion head for their wall. Is this a good thing or a bad thing? That’s a very complex question and the only simple answer is that twitter isn’t the best place to decide it. So here’s a start: there are two very different moral issues here which are being confused: the ugly death of a lion at the hands of a sports hunter on the one hand, and the conservation of charismatic predators in Africa on the other.

How do I feel, at a visceral level, about a hunter with a bow and arrow shooting a magnificent big cat; that intelligent, powerful, fierce animal then taking many hours to die, only to be decapitated and shipped to America as a trophy? Well, I don’t feel good. I can’t imagine doing it myself. It is a sad and grotesque end for such a magnificent animal. Still, wild animals come to sad and grotesque ends all the time, especially apex predators. Not many go gently. Canine distemper virus periodically kills many of the lions in Serengeti National Park - a horrible lingering death including grand mal seizures and encephalitis. Many lions die of starvation. When the male lions of a pride die or are killed by rivals, their place is taken by other males who routinely kill all the cubs in order to free up the reproductive potential of 'their’ lionesses. The general estimate is that half of all lion cubs die before the age of two, many from starvation, and only 1 in 8 males makes it to adulthood, as they are forcibly ejected from their maternal pride. Wild lions live with porcupine quills in their faces, intractable bacterial infections, and the constant threat of violence from their own kind. Not many nature documentaries are brave enough to follow a 12 year old lion like Cecil to his slow and painful natural grave. So while it’s an important question whether it is right for a hunter to kill, deliberately, a healthy, adult male lion in a fashion that ensures a painful and lingering death, let us not be blinded to what kind of end awaits such an animal otherwise.

More importantly I’m not sure that one can feel disgusted at the death of this one lion while not protesting the killing of bears in the United States. In California alone there is a hunting quota of 1500 black bears per year. That’s 6 times as many lions as are killed in the whole of Africa each year. The black bear population of California is exactly the same size as the African lion population, yet is deemed to be sustainably harvested at 6 times the rate of African lions. Bears are routinely hunted with dogs in the US (yes that is the origin of the term 'hounding’) although some states, including CA in 2012, have banned this practice. 1 in 10 black bears killed by hunters in California are killed with bows and arrows - in 2013 that was around 100 individuals. None of those bears were 'beloved’; had human names, or were tourist attractions. None of their deaths sparked outrage. Black bears are intelligent, magnificent, fierce animals. Bear hunters skin and behead their catch (why else would they hunt?) and thus they furnish the lounges and dens, just as a lion hunter does. A bear killed with an arrow is unlikely to die a clean and polished death. A bear wounded with an arrow even less so. So why are there over 300,000 tweets about Cecil the Lion and none about Californian black bears? The answer is obvious - it’s a viral moral outrage storm, and it obscures the second moral question at stake here: the conservation management of African lions.

The African lion population has declined steeply in recent decades to its present level of somewhere between 23000 and 39000 individuals. The terrible reality is that charismatic apex predators do not flourish anywhere in the world where they co-exist with large, dense human populations. Tigers in India, grizzlies in the US, wolves in Europe, sharks off the coast of eastern Australia, cougars in Florida, none of them will find it easy to survive without vigorous management and protection. Complete quarantining of predators from people is possible only in protected areas (national parks and the like) but such areas will never provide enough habitat for large wild populations to be sustained. Large predators need territory to follow their prey through the seasons and they cannot be contained, short of fencing national parks. Nor can they be domesticated enough to be guaranteed never to kill livestock and even humans. So there must be compromises reached in how these predators live in proximity to human populations outside of national parks, because conflicts with humans are the most important causes of mortality for lions in edge zones.

One reasonably promising model is to develop buffer zones around protected areas in which wildlife can live, if not being strictly protected, and in Africa these often take the form of hunting concessions, Wildlife Management Areas, game controlled areas and so on. These are not empty places, but are full of people as well as wildlife. Buffer zones around national parks are often intensely contested lands. In East Africa they are - at best, for wildlife - home to traditional pastoralists, whose livestock practices (mobile, seasonal grazing at low population densities) have enabled them to co-exist for centuries alongside a rich biota of wild animals. But all too often, land that abuts national parks is needed by farmers whose populations are expanding, and whose land is already poor in financial return. The great conundrum for African governments and their advisors is how to balance these competing needs for resources. In an ideal world, local peoples have both economic use of their land and economic incentives to foster healthy populations of wild animals on that same land. So far, this is extremely rare. There are only a few ways for that to work and in East Africa it’s usually some combination of pastoralism, tourism, and hunting concessions. For species like lion and elephant, who are dangerous, who kill local people, and are destructive of their livelihoods (eating, respectively, livestock and crops), the incentives need to be particularly strong to offset the costs. That is where hunting licences can play a role. As everyone now knows, the cost to an American tourist of hunting big game in Africa is stupendous. Right now, very little of that tends to flow back into local communities. I’ve seen myself the armoured vehicles and machine-gun toting guards of the Game Controlled Areas around Longido in northern Tanzania. They are leased to Arab hunting companies and in constant conflict with local Maasai pastoralists. But in other parts of Africa, notably Namibia, hunting concessions are in fact run by local communities, who benefit substantially from them. And these include those expensive, rare, lion hunting licences. Most African states only allow the off-take of adult male lions, who are after all reproductively the least valuable individuals. By contrast, in Kenya, where trophy hunting was banned in 1977, and traditional pastoralism largely dismantled by privatisation of common lands, national parks are surrounded, cheek by jowl, with farms growing vegetables and flowers for the European market. And Kenyan wildlife populations have declined by up to 70% since then.

The liberal conscience may revolt. Isn’t trophy hunting the crudest replay of imperial violence? Aren’t we thrown back to Teddy Roosevelt, killing hundreds of creatures in a rampage around southern Africa at the turn of the century? Isn’t it shameful to see an American toting a dead leopard with a big smile on his face?

Maybe. But surely the generous response is to think not only of the tourists who 'loved’ a lion; and of the lion himself; but also to think of the black bears of California, and the struggling pastoralist communities of East Africa: of all the living beings implicated in this web of global transactions, before we jump to moral outrage about this one death.


TOPICS: Government; Pets/Animals; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: africa; banglist; cecil; cecilthelion; hunting; lion; minnesota; walterpalmer; zimbabwe
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I do not completely agree with Brigid, but she approaches the topic with rationality.
1 posted on 07/30/2015 7:15:24 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: marktwain
Utopian Zimbabwe.


2 posted on 07/30/2015 7:17:17 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Sad fact, most people just want a candidate to tell them what they want to hear)
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To: marktwain
Preachy. What's her point?
3 posted on 07/30/2015 7:21:22 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: marktwain

Long term future for those African animals does not look good. African governments are inept when it comes to.managing the land.


4 posted on 07/30/2015 7:27:07 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
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To: hinckley buzzard

I would say her points are:

1. Lions are not people, and the death of “Cecil” was not an important event for lions or people in the big picture.

2. Sport Hunting is what is keeping most lion populations in Africa afloat.

3. The emotional outpouring about “Cecil” is irrational, and we should not make policy based on it.


5 posted on 07/30/2015 7:27:41 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: marktwain
The black bear population of California is exactly the same size as the African lion population, yet is deemed to be sustainably harvested at 6 times the rate of African lions.

This person is aware that there is a slight difference in the sizes of Africa and California and that population density does play a role here?

This person seems to be less hysterical then others. I do not think that qualifies as "rational".

6 posted on 07/30/2015 7:36:16 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

There are a lot of significan differences.

Bear are omnivores, so a given area can sustain more of them.

But she makes a valid point that it is an emotional response to the death of a lion, rather than a rational one.

She does not come out and say it, but if you want wild lions in Africa to survive, you shoud support sport hunting of them.


7 posted on 07/30/2015 7:46:09 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: marktwain
Lions are not people, and the death of “Cecil” was not an important event for lions or people in the big picture.

Oh boy, you left out the Disneyfication factor.

SIMBA, just like BAMBI, has become the anthropomorphized representative of the species. (Cousin Cecil is just a Simba surrogate, unsafe when Man is in the Forest--or on the plains).

Humans is eeevil, dontchaknow.

8 posted on 07/30/2015 7:47:01 PM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: marktwain

Interesting article. Thanks for posting it.


9 posted on 07/30/2015 7:47:39 PM PDT by kalee
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To: marktwain
She does not come out and say it, but if you want wild lions in Africa to survive, you should support sport hunting of them.

That is quite true. And that goes for many species. Sport hunting is one of the ways to add value to species that are dangerous or destructive to human habitat.

When you limit the number of animals taken, raise the price to hunt them and employ as many people as possible to help care for the hunters then you have turned something that has no value into something that is a resource.

I cringe when I hear the "no ivory" commercials. Elephants are majestic creatures unless they are stomping across your fields and uprooting your orchards.

Controlled harvests keep the population in check and gives the locals a reason to want to keep them around.

I fear they are going to "protect" the animals right into extinction.

10 posted on 07/30/2015 7:58:57 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

“I fear they are going to “protect” the animals right into extinction.”

That is precisely the path that we are on. The people emotionally reacting to the death of an old alpha male lion are working hard to ensure the extinction of African lions.

They do not realize that is what they are doing, but it is exactly what they are doing.


11 posted on 07/30/2015 8:09:20 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: marktwain

So, we have to destroy the village to save it. Hmm. The 1970s called, and ...


12 posted on 07/30/2015 8:25:01 PM PDT by sparklite2 (Voting is acting white.)
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To: sparklite2

“So, we have to destroy the village to save it. Hmm.”

Nope. Sport hunting is what has saved habitat and wildlife populations all over the world, but particularily in the United States.

Sport hunting preserves animal populations, because you cannot have sport hunting without the animals to hunt.


13 posted on 07/30/2015 9:26:56 PM PDT by marktwain
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To: marktwain
but if you want wild lions in Africa to survive, you shoud support sport hunting of them.

Not many people get this.

14 posted on 07/30/2015 10:58:51 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: marktwain; grania
Sport hunting is what has saved habitat and wildlife populations all over the world, but particularily in the United States.

Again, you are awesome. You beat me to making this point on this thread.

15 posted on 07/30/2015 10:59:56 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema

But...is the world better off without Cecil or did his presence make the world a better place? Probably the latter if one had to choose. Or do we only see human beings as having distinct souls/personalities? At any rate in the grand scheme of things I don’t understand all the outrage over this story, but...the lion deserved a clean kill.


16 posted on 07/31/2015 1:33:36 AM PDT by kelly4c (http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/post?id=2900389%2C41#help)
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To: kelly4c

The many hundreds of baby animals this lion killed did not get a clean kill.
See the video in post 16.


17 posted on 07/31/2015 2:55:59 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: kelly4c

Different thread, sorry.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Llb_f3pNZdo


18 posted on 07/31/2015 2:57:09 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: kelly4c

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MiOUpM1jak

My point is that these are brutal cruel killers, see the above video for evidence.
One less of them most definitely makes the world a far better place.
Without a doubt.

My salute to the dentist.


19 posted on 07/31/2015 2:58:58 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema

I know they’re dangerous but I admire them from afar. They have every right to be here as they are God’s creatures as well.

We are given dominion over animals such as these yes and I have no problem with killing humanely for certain purposes but just for the “fun” of it. Nope.


20 posted on 07/31/2015 4:21:45 AM PDT by kelly4c (http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/post?id=2900389%2C41#help)
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