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What strikes me the most is this bit in the article:
From 1999 they (Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at Oxford University) began an ongoing ecological study of African lions in Hwange to measure the impact of sport-hunting beyond the park on the lion population within the park, using radio-telemetry and direct observation.
The research found that 34 of 62 tagged lions died during the study period; 24 were shot by sport hunters. Sport hunters in the safari areas surrounding the park killed 72 percent of tagged adult males from the study area. This caused a decline in numbers of adult males in the population.
The article didn't mention if they tagged only male lions. Is the park so small that the adult males have to wander outside the park, or are the hunters systematically luring the lions out of the protected area? Those numbers (72% of adult males are shot) don't seem very healthy, and will surely affect the pride structures. Is this sustainable?
You are totally wrong. Where there are too many males there are fewer cubs that make it to maturity. You should know that from watching Animal Planet! There only needs to be a very few males to breed. The others are a major hindrance to the overall population. Hunting of old mature male lions does nothing negative to the population. FACT!
Regards,
Philip
P.S. Bleeding Heart animal rights activist types need to be removed from this site.