As per SAPA recommendation.
10. Facilities for Hunting
10.1. The size of the hunting area must comply with the relevant provincial legislation as a
minimum.
10.2. SAPA recommends that the habitat and topography of the hunting area must also be taken
into consideration and not only the size of the area.
10.3. SAPA recommends a minimum area of 1000ha with appropriate adjustments depending on
habitat and topography.
10.4. Additional recommendations:
Natural veld area with a diversity of habitat
No cultivated land
Sufficient non-domesticated prey of a variety of species available.
Water provisioned area.
Position of hunting area at least 1 km away from breeding/keeping facilities
Minimal unnatural structures
11. Release for Hunting
11.1. Animals must be released according to the relevant prescribed legal requirements.
11.2. SAPA preferred minimum release period is 7 days prior to the hunt.
As per Forestry, fisheries and environment, RSA
1. No hunting takes place in national parks
2. The following are prohibited methods of hunting lion:
by means of poison, traps, snares, flood- or spot lights or darting;
with an automatic weapon, a weapon discharging a cartridge with a rimfire of .22 of an inch or smaller, a shotgun or an air gun;
by luring it by means of bait, smell, sound or any other luring method;
if the lion is under the influence of a tranquilizing, narcotic, immobilizing or similar agent; or
if the lion is trapped against a fence or in a small enclosure where the lion does not have a fair chance to evade the hunter
3. The minimum size of land onto which captive-bred lions must be released for hunting, is regulated by provincial conservation authorities (currently a minimum of 1000 ha)
Lion conservation in South Africa (cont.) fisheries and environment, RSA:
Expansion of South Africa’s wild population limited by availability of suitable habitat
The SA wild lion population is managed in terms of a meta-population management plan, as part of the Biodiversity Management Plan for lion (2015) developed under NEMBA
There is no mixing of captive-bred lions with the wild population
Sufficient non domesticated prey means, CBL lion can start hunting when he feels so.
Another interesting fact: (law prohibits mixing CBL and wild population, can explain alleged lack of successful introduction program - at least in South Africa, hence "lack of conservation value" is man made, by law?):