The Columbus Dispatch

Some experts say that ending big-game shoots hurts residents

- By Rachel Nuwer

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service moved last month to allow hunters to bring home trophies from elephants killed in Zimbabwe and Zambia. Safe to say, few conservati­onists saw it coming.

In a 39-page report, the agency cited Zimbabwe’s progress in creating a sound management plan for its 82,000 elephants and evidence that hunting revenue is in fact reinvested into conservati­on. Well-managed trophy hunting "would not have an adverse effect on the species, but can further efforts to conserve the species in the wild," the agency concluded.

The announceme­nt, which would have turned back an elephant-trophy prohibitio­n instituted during the Obama administra­tion, was met with praise from pro-hunting groups, such as the National Rifle Associatio­n and Safari Club Internatio­nal, and criticism from animal-rights advocates.

Unexpected­ly, President Donald Trump intervened on Twitter, saying that the trophy decision would be delayed "until such time as I review all conservati­on facts."

Whether the proceeds from big-game hunting should be used to protect threatened and endangered species is a difficult question. In some areas, including in Namibia and Zimbabwe, the strategy has helped revive wildlife population­s. In others, including Tanzania, hunting has fed corruption and decimated species.

Among conservati­on biologists and advocacy groups, trophy hunting is the third rail: Their supporters largely are repulsed by the sanctioned shooting and butchering of elephants, lions and other big game. The killing of Cecil, a Zimbabwean lion, by an American hunter set off a global socialmedi­a storm.

Many conservati­onists "have been bullied into silence" on the subject of hunting, said Michael ‘t SasRolfes, a research fellow at Oxford University who studies wildlife trade.

Yet many experts also believe that the proceeds from hunting are all that prevents many poor communitie­s from turning against local wildlife.

"While the noise in the press is all about morals and entitled white men killing innocent animals to hang obnoxiousl­y on their wall — all of which I agree with — this actually has very little to do with pragmatic conservati­on," said Brian Child, an ecologist at the University of Florida.

Critics of big-game hunting seldom offer viable alternativ­es for the communitie­s that rely on these funds to protect wildlife, Child said. Nor do the countries that issue trophy bans typically provide financial assistance sufficient to make up for the shortfall when hunting income goes away.

Hunters pay $65,000 to $140,000 to hunt lions in Zimbabwe, for example; an elephant hunt can run $36,000 to $70,000.

"Zimbabwe is on its knees because of economic

downturn, yet the internatio­nal community expects our poor country to look after elephants and lions when we can’t even feed our nation,” said Victor Muposhi, a zoologist at Chinhoyi University of Technology in Chinhoyi, Zimbabwe.

“I think one of the real problems in this whole debate is that people are looking for generaliza­tions about trophy hunting, and there just are none,” said Rosie Cooney, chairwoman of the sustainabl­e use and livelihood­s specialist group at the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. “There’s great examples and terrible examples and ones we don’t have a clue about — and everything in between.”

Those looking for the terrible examples will find no shortage of them.

A study by Craig Packer, director of the Lion Research Center at the University of Minnesota, found that sport hunting directly contribute­d to the decline of lions in most of Tanzania’s hunting areas. Over the past dozen years, he also reported, 40 percent of these areas were abandoned because of declines in trophy species.

In other countries, including Zimbabwe, officials have simply seized hunting preserves and reaped the profits without reinvestin­g in conservati­on, according The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service moved last month to allow hunters to bring home trophies, such as tusks, from elephants killed in Zimbabwe and Zambia, a prohibitio­n that had been instituted by the Obama administra­tion. But President Donald Trump has delayed that ruling, saying he wants to study the situation.

to Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and author of “The Extinction Market.”

Even where a conservati­on strategy seems to work, critics question the contradict­ion inherent in hunting threatened and endangered species.

“Any trophy hunting of an endangered species is by definition unsustaina­ble, as it cannot sufficient­ly contribute to the survival of the species to justify removing individual­s from the population,” said Elly Pepper, a deputy director at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Indeed, savanna elephant population­s across Africa

declined 30 percent from 2007 to 2014, primarily as a result of poaching. But the numbers were not evenly distribute­d.

Most legal trophy hunting for elephants occurs in southern Africa, in countries such as Namibia and South Africa. The region accounts for nearly 40 percent of the continent’s 415,000 elephants, according to data presented last week at a meeting of the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora in Geneva.

In Zimbabwe’s Campfire communitie­s — which are equivalent in size to the country’s strictly protected national parks, but reliant on

trophy hunting — elephants destroyed more than 17,000 acres of crops from 2010 to 2015. Along with other animals, elephants have killed 139 community members since 2010.

Lions, likewise, killed four people in Mozambique in 2016, not to mention 220 cows. Tolerance for wildlife quickly wanes if animals cease to bring benefits — a growing threat in Zimbabwe, Muposhi said.

“All of Zimbabwe’s hunting areas are surrounded by communitie­s who are hungry for agricultur­al land,” Muposhi said. “If people see that elephants and lions no longer have value, they’ll kill all the animals and let their cattle use the land currently set aside for wildlife.”

Some argue that photograph­ic tourism can make up for these losses, but Muposhi disagrees.

Hunters tend to relish the chance of spending three weeks or more in rugged wilderness lacking roads, cellphone service and treated water. Tourists on photograph­ic safaris, on the other hand, “’are soft people,” Muposhi said.

“They expect to sleep in a nice bed in a nice lodge where there’s no mosquitoes and there’s electricit­y and pure water.”

That’s why transformi­ng hunting areas into destinatio­ns that appeal to convention­al tourists often requires prohibitiv­ely expensive investment in infrastruc­ture and marketing.

For ‘t Sas-Rolfes and other experts, the trophy hunting debate remains a tiring distractio­n from the pivotal question of how to sustainabl­y finance conservati­on in Africa, and how to deal with poaching and growing human population­s.

“We’re talking about the wrong thing right now,” said Dan Ashe, president of the Associatio­n of Zoos and Aquariums and former director of the Fish and Wildlife Service. “Trophy hunting is not the issue. We should be focused on wildlife traffickin­g and the broader plight of elephants.”

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? The savanna elephant population across Africa declined 30 percent from 2007 to 2014, primarily as a result of poaching. It typically costs $36,000 to $70,000 for an elephant hunt, and it’s even more for a lion hunt: $65,000 to $140,000.
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] The savanna elephant population across Africa declined 30 percent from 2007 to 2014, primarily as a result of poaching. It typically costs $36,000 to $70,000 for an elephant hunt, and it’s even more for a lion hunt: $65,000 to $140,000.
 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ??
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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