The Guardian (USA)

Hundreds of lynx to be hunted in Sweden following biggest ever wolf cull

- Beata Furstenber­g in Gothenburg

Sweden has issued licences to hunters to kill a total of 201 lynx, weeks after dozens of wolves were killed in the country’s biggest wolf cull in modern times.

The number of licences to kill lynx throughout March, issued by Sweden’s country administra­tions, is more than double the number in recent years.

The planned cull is out of all proportion to any danger to livestock or people, say wildlife conservati­onists and activists, who are asking the EU to take action against Sweden for breaching environmen­tal law.

“This is a trophy hunt, just like going to Africa to hunt lions,” said Magnus Orrebrant, the head of Svenska Rovdjursfö­reningen, an animal rights advocacy group that has started a petition calling for the trophy hunting of lynx to be stopped. “Hundreds of foreign hunters come to Sweden for lynx hunting because they think it is exciting.”

Conservati­onists warned last month that the lynx population in Europe could collapse unless immediate efforts are made to protect the animals. Tests on the remaining cats in France show that their genetic diversity is so low they will become locally extinct within the next 30 years without interventi­on.

There are around 1,450 lynx spread across Sweden, about 300 fewer than 10 years ago. Naturvårds­verket, the Swedish environmen­tal protection agency, argues that the country needs only 870 animals to maintain a healthy population.

The Swedish hunters’ associatio­n,

Svenska Jägareförb­undet, admits the lynx do not pose a danger to humans. Henrik Falk, an adviser to the associatio­n, told the Guardian: “The hunt is absolutely not linked to any danger to humans. Neither is wolf hunting – there are no documented cases of wolves attacking humans in Swedish modern times.

“The lynx hunt is more about the excitement, and for some hunters, of course, the skin is the motivation.”

Lynx, like most other game animals in Sweden, are hunted using dogs.

The EU Habitats Directive specifies that hunting may be allowed either to prevent damage to livestock or in the interests of public safety.

It is “strongly questionab­le” that either of these conditions applies to lynx in Sweden, said Benny Gäfwert, a predator expert at the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). “We do not think the hunters can invoke these exceptions, and we have notified the EU Commission,” Gäfwert said.

“That hunting occurs, we do not, in itself, have a problem with, but the extent to which it occurs in relation to the low damage caused by the lynx is unwarrante­d.”

The WWF is also challengin­g Sweden’s explanatio­n for its ongoing wolf cull, Gäfwert said.

Historical­ly, lynx have ranged across Eurasia but have come under intense pressure in many countries from habitat loss, inbreeding, poaching and traffic collisions. In Britain, calls to reintroduc­e lynx to the wild were rejected last month by the environmen­t minister, Thérèse Coffey.

Conservati­onists point to the role of lynx in controllin­g Sweden’s large population of deer, moose and boar.

The lynx hunt in Sweden is taking place during the mating season when their fur is thickest, making it particular­ly attractive to hunters, said Marie Stegard Lind of anti-hunting group Jaktkritik­erna. “This is completely unnecessar­y – a pure trophy hunt,” she said.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Ondrej Prosicky/Alamy ?? Lynx population­s are under pressure in Europe from habitat loss and poaching. Photograph:
Ondrej Prosicky/Alamy Lynx population­s are under pressure in Europe from habitat loss and poaching. Photograph:
 ?? ?? A Eurasian lynx pictured in a pine forest in Sweden. Photograph: Arterra Picture Library/Alamy
A Eurasian lynx pictured in a pine forest in Sweden. Photograph: Arterra Picture Library/Alamy

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