The Mail on Sunday

Hybrid cats defy nature in lust for profit

Many cubs will be born with terrible defects

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LIONS and tigers are being crossbred in captivity in a sickening bid to squeeze even greater profits from South Africa’s barbaric bone trade, conservati­onists claim.

My undercover investigat­ors have learned that bizarre hybrid animals are being created that are even bigger and more imposing than the big cats found naturally in the wild.

This makes them even more valuable when they are slaughtere­d and their skeletons sold to South East Asia and China to satisfy the huge demand for medicines made from lion and tiger bones.

In a sinister twist to South Africa’s ‘ lion farming’ trade, some operators have imported tigers, which have no place on the African continent, to breed with lions and produce ‘ligers’ (when the father is a lion) or ‘tigons’ (when the father is a tiger).

Remarkably, a three- year- old liger or tigon can be the same size of a nine-year-old lion, thereby producing more bone weight – and greater profits – once slaughtere­d.

Ligers have the greatest financial value: they weigh an average of 71 stone and would stand nearly 12ft tall on their hind legs.

Experts say the abusive breeding process often results i n birth defects and the early death of cubs, as well as complicati­ons for mothers because they have to give birth to super-sized cubs.

A report four years ago estimated that there were 280 tigers in South Africa at 44 sites. My investigat­ion, however, suggests this is a dramatic underestim­ate, with around 50 tigers believed to be at just one location.

At another wildlife facility in Free State Province, my investigat­ors made a disturbing discovery. In a fenced enclosure a group of three tigers and five lions were laying down together in the shade. In the same enclosure, another lion and tiger were found together near the perimeter fence.

One of the investigat­ors described the experience as ‘ unsettling’, adding: ‘ It’s not something you expect to see. We were thinking, “what are they here for, where are they going to go?”’

Staff at the park told my investigat­ors that the lions and tigers

were only kept together until they reached breeding age at around two years old. The park last week di d not r espond when asked whether it was cross-breeding.

At another wildlife park near Johannesbu­rg, one of my team found a large tiger that was pregnant and expecting a litter of cubs.

Without carrying out DNA tests, my investigat­ors were unable to prove cross-breeding at any individual centre but conservati­onists believe inbreeding in South Africa is ‘rampant’. Meanwhile, tourists are unwittingl­y fuelling both the bone trade and trophy hunting by paying to either pet lion cubs or for ‘walking with lions’ experience­s.

Ukutula game reserve, about 50 miles north- west of Pretoria, charges visitors £46 for a one hour ‘enrichment walk’ with lions. Visitors must sign an agreement that any photograph­s taken there are for ‘private use only’.

Spokesman Willi Jacobs said: ‘Ukutula conducts these walks to enrich the lives of animals who would otherwise be confined to their enclosures. The revenue generated allows us to support research projects that contribute meaningful­ly to conservati­on.’

 ??  ?? UNNATURAL: Tigers and lionesses lie together in one wildlife park
UNNATURAL: Tigers and lionesses lie together in one wildlife park
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