The Citizen (Gauteng)

Big cats slipping away silently

BAD NEWS: DECLINING NUMBERS MAY BE HAPPENING UNDETECTED – CONSERVATI­ON SCIENTISTS

- Paris

Experts want endangered listing instead of present status as vulnerable.

Lions and cheetahs are closer to extinction than the authoritat­ive red list of threatened species suggests, according to conservati­on scientists who warn that sharp drops in population­s could be going undetected.

Africa’s marquee big cats are currently listed as “vulnerable” but with declines in lion numbers close to the threshold for a higher risk category and heated debate over how many cheetahs are actually left in the wild, experts are asking if this is enough.

An “uplisting” does not guarantee protection, they say, but it would more accurately reflect their dire situation and could channel resources to help them survive in the wild, where they are most recently menaced by poaching and the pet trade.

The stone lions guarding Beijing’s Forbidden City, the bronze ones at Admiral Nelson’s feet on Trafalgar Square, the constellat­ion Leo and the emblems of a score of top European football clubs all attest to the cultural significan­ce of these majestic creatures.

But as apex predators, they are also lynchpins in their ecosystems. As South African conservati­onist Paul Funston puts it, the “big daddy holding a lot of things in place”.

For half a century, the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) red list has classified species along a spectrum from “least concern” and “near threatened” to “vulnerable”, “endangered”, “critically endangered” and “extinct in the wild”.

Broadly, if at least half the population of a species is lost within three generation­s, it moves to a more threatened category.

Last stop on the slide to oblivion is “extinct”.

Threatened status can trigger national protective measures, restrictio­ns in internatio­nal trade and funding from states or NGOs.

Lions and cheetahs were both reconfirme­d as “vulnerable” in 2014 and are unlikely to change category in a red list update at the IUCN congress in Marseille, which started yesterday. But some experts want the IUCN to go further.

“Cheetahs should be classified as ‘endangered’,” Sarah Durant, an expert on cheetahs and a member of the IUCN’s cat specialist group, said. Following the 2014 assessment, to which she contribute­d, Durant and another 50 conservati­on experts made that case in a peer-reviewed study.

One-sizefits-all criteria applied by the

IUCN, they argued, do not do justice to all species. Overall, the cheetah’s global numbers were estimated to have dropped about 30% to roughly 7 000 over the space of 15 years. To put that in perspectiv­e, the ratio of people to cheetahs is roughly a million to one.

While steep, the decline was still well short of the 50% threshold for an uplisting to “endangered”. But that assessment is likely overoptimi­stic, scientists say, because the data comes overwhelmi­ngly from protected areas, such as national parks and game reserves, even though that is not where most cheetahs are found.

About three-quarters of the big cat’s range – and an estimated two-thirds of its population – is in unprotecte­d zones where the felines must contend with scarce prey, fragmented habitat and deadly encounters with pastoralis­ts defending their livestock.

“We’re measuring population decline in the area where they’re actually doing best,” Durant said.

More long-term, the picture is even bleaker. The cheetah was once a top predator across most of Africa, the Middle East, central Asia and India, but today it occupies only a sliver – less than 10% – of its historic range. And since 1900, their numbers have dropped by more than 90%. “These are catastroph­ic declines,” said Durant, a professor in conservati­on science at the Zoological Society of London.

Lions have not fared better, even if their population in the wild exceeds 20 000, said Funston, senior director of the lion programme at conservati­on NGO Panthera. In the 2014 assessment,

We are suddenly seeing an increase in the poaching of lions

to which he contribute­d, their global population was found to have dropped by 43% over 21 years – missing a reclassifi­cation threshold by a whisker.

Unlike cheetahs, lions live in groups, or prides, and almost exclusivel­y within protected areas. But that doesn’t mean they are always easy to locate. “Every time we go and look in any real detail, we find there are fewer lions than we thought, typically three, four, even tenfold fewer,” Funston said.

In 2017, Funston led an intensive survey of two large national parks in southeaste­rn Angola where conservati­on authoritie­s had put the population at about 1 000. “Actual numbers were so low we couldn’t derive a proper scientific estimate. We concluded there were 10 to 30 lions left.”

The top driver of lion decline is industrial-scale bushmeat poaching, either of the lions or their prey. Trophy hunting, habitat loss and conflict with humans also menace the animals. Since 2014, new threats have emerged.

“Particular­ly in southern Africa, we are suddenly seeing an increase in the poaching of lions for body parts” – especially teeth, claws and bones – to supply a booming market in Southeast Asia and China for bogus health and virility elixirs, Funston said.

This illegal traffic has been spurred on by South Africa’s decade-old and controvers­ial commercial captive lion-breeding industry, according to a recent report he co-authored.

From 2011 to 2019, poaching for body parts accounted for more than 60% of all lion mortality within Limpopo National Park in Mozambique.

For cheetahs, the new threat comes from the Gulf states, where a demand for pets has fuelled a brisk trade in cubs, especially from the horn of Africa, where a subspecies teeters on the brink of extinction.

Social networks are driving a demand for live big cats as well. “Influencer­s are flying out of Dubai to get photograph­ed with a cheetah or lion to boost Instagram traffic,” Durant said. –

 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? NUMBERS DOWN. A male lion struts in the Amboseli National Park in Kenya. Lions and cheetahs are closer to extinction than the authoritat­ive Red List of Threatened Species suggests, according to conservati­on scientists.
Pictures: AFP NUMBERS DOWN. A male lion struts in the Amboseli National Park in Kenya. Lions and cheetahs are closer to extinction than the authoritat­ive Red List of Threatened Species suggests, according to conservati­on scientists.
 ??  ?? CATASTROPH­IC DECLINES. Afra and her seven-week-old cheetah cubs at Schoenbrun­n Zoo in Vienna. Cheetahs were once a top predator across most of Africa, the Middle East, central Asia and India.
CATASTROPH­IC DECLINES. Afra and her seven-week-old cheetah cubs at Schoenbrun­n Zoo in Vienna. Cheetahs were once a top predator across most of Africa, the Middle East, central Asia and India.
 ??  ?? ICONIC. A bronze lion at the base of Nelson's Column against the backdrop of a fake sun in London's Trafalgar Square. The luminous orb produces the equivalent light of 60 000 light bulbs.
ICONIC. A bronze lion at the base of Nelson's Column against the backdrop of a fake sun in London's Trafalgar Square. The luminous orb produces the equivalent light of 60 000 light bulbs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa