robertq
AH fanatic
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Messages
- 689
- Reaction score
- 631
- Location
- Wallkill, NY
- Media
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- Articles
- 21
- Member of
- Life member of DSC, SCI, NRA, Rocky Mt Elk Foundation, American Hunter, Buck Masters & Ruffed Grouse Society
- Hunted
- Russia, Argentina, Canada & South Africa
Hank, I think we all agree with what your saying.... what I'm not in favor of is CBL to be released out of a cage for the sole purpose to hunt it in a short period of time.I agree with you @Royal27, but I don't think this was my point.
My point was that if lions ever were close to extinction, would you rather have an IUCN listing of 'extinct' or 'extinct in the wild'? It's just logical to suggest that we will never, ever, ever, run out of lions if they are being bred somewhere for some other purpose.
Having said that, I read the article that Robert posted, which addresses the issue of re-introducing lions into lion areas. I see no reason why we would do that today. Like the article suggests, it probably wouldn't work, for a whole bunch of reasons. But if at some point down the road, we had no lions left in the wild at all (sort of like scimitar horned oryx), wouldn't we rather there were real live lions somewhere? My guess is that as long as we hav e captive bred lions, we at least have the opportunity of re-introducing lions into the wild, should that ever become necessary.
I think there have been cases - I'd find them but I'm not as good at this as @BRICKBURN - where captive born lions were introduced into a fenced property, and over time learned to hunt and formed a pride, and reproduced. If I'm wrong, happy to admit it, but if I'm right, surely that proves something?
The bottom line is that I will never worry about the existence of lions on this planet so long as SAPA ()or someone else) is breeding them.
I do worry - a lot - about the existence of wild lion habitat though.