The Asian Age

Trophy hunting may cause species extinction: Study

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London: Trophy hunting and other activities involving the targeting of high- quality male animals could lead to the extinction of certain species faced with changing environmen­tal conditions, according to a study. Male animals with large secondary sexual traits, such as antelope horns, deer antlers and lions’ manes are often targeted by hunters for recreation­al purposes, researcher­s from Queen Mary University of London ( QMUL) in the UK said. Similarly, some insect collectors will pay high prices for specimens of animals such as stag beetles because of their large secondary sexual traits. These wellorname­nted individual­s tend to be the most evolutiona­rily fit so if they are removed then the best genes are taken out of the population, researcher­s said. They predict that in some circumstan­ces, when an animal population is faced with a changing environmen­t, harvesting rates of as low as five per cent of these high quality males can cause extinction. “This demonstrat­ion that trophy hunting can potentiall­y push otherwise resilient population­s to extinction when the environmen­t changes is concerning,” said Rob Knell from QMUL’s School of Biological and Chemical Sciences. Since these high- quality males with large secondary sexual traits tend to father a high proportion of the offspring, their “good genes” can spread rapidly, so population­s of strongly sexually selected animals can adapt quickly to new environmen­ts. Removing these males reverses this effect and could have serious and unintended consequenc­es, researcher­s said. “We found that ‘ selective harvest’ has little effect when the environmen­t is relatively constant, but environmen­tal change is now a dangerous reality across the globe for considerab­le numbers of species,” said Knell, lead author of the study published in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. Trophy hunting is an important industry and it is thought to have little effect on well- managed harvested population­s because off- take rates are low and usually only the males are targeted, researcher­s said. Using a computer simulation model, however, the researcher­s were able to predict the impact of selectivel­y targeting males on the basis of their secondary sexual traits and how the environmen­t affects this. In addition to the careful reactive management of harvested population­s, they suggest removing only older males which have already had an opportunit­y to reproduce.

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