Lion farmers may get export quota

Picture:SANParks

Picture:SANParks

Published Jan 28, 2017

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Johannesburg - South Africa’s Department of Environmental

Affairs plans to establish an annual quota for the export of skeletons from

farm-bred lions and won’t authorize shipments until one has been put in place.

An export permit will only be granted when a scientific

authority has advised that it won’t be detrimental to the survival of the species,

Albi Modise, a spokesman for the department, said on Tuesday in response to

questions, adding that the proposal is for 800 skeletons to be exported. He

said the export quota for captive lions may help prevent the poaching of wild

lions as demand surges following initiatives from countries including India and

Russia to better protect tigers.

“Well-regulated trade will enable the department to

monitor a number of issues, including the possible impact on the wild

populations,” Modise said. The quota proposal will be sent to the United

Nations’ Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild

Fauna and Flora.

Plunging population

There are 20 000 lions left in Africa, 43 percent less

than two decades ago, and only six countries host populations with more than

1,000 animals, Panthera, WildAid and the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit

said in a report last year. Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe

together are home to almost a third of the continent’s lions while the species

is extinct in at least 15 African countries. Lion bones, which can substitute

for tiger bones, are used in East Asian countries including  China as

medicinal remedies said to treat a wide range of ailments from insomnia to

osteoporosis.

““Four Paws opposes the Department of Environmental

Affairs’ recommendation,” Fiona Miles, country director of conservation group

Four Paws South Africa, said. There should be a “total suspension of trade in

captive lions and their bones” and an end to captive-lion breeding in order to

protect the species, she said.

African lions are classified as “vulnerable” on the

International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened

Species. A WildCRU report estimated that South Africa has more than 9,000 lions

with about one third of them free-roaming in reserves and the rest kept captive

on farms. In total, 1 160 lion skeletons were legally exported from South

Africa between 2008 and 2011 after regulations on the hunting of captive bred

lions was tightened, according to the joint report by lion advocacy

organizations Panthera, WildAid and WildCRU.

The quota should be higher than 800 skeletons and the

trade poses no threat to wild lions and in fact diminishes it, Carla van der

Vyver, the CEO of the South African Predator Association, which represents lion

farmers, said in an e-mailed response to questions.

’Consistent supply’

“If there is a regulated, consistent supply at a

reasonable price, it reduces the likelihood of illegal traders getting the

opportunity to supply the market at prices that make illegal trade worthwhile,”

she said.

As many as 8 000 lions and other big cats are kept on 200

or more breeding farms, according to wildlife charity Born Free Foundation.

Lion skeletons can sell for more than $2 000 each with consumers in Asia paying

“far higher” prices than that, according to the organisation.

Tiger Tonics

The South African National Biodiversity Institute will

start a three-year study to monitor lion bone trade in South Africa and

investigate how the trade in bones from captive lions using a quota system

affects wild lion populations, Modise said. The public has until Feb. 2 to

comment and a final quota will be sent to CITES in March, he said.

“South Africa’s commercial lion breeding industry is

unspeakably cynical and cruel, poses a threat to wild lions and other big cats,

and needs to be shut down,” said Will Travers, foundation president of the Born

Free Foundation, which campaigns for the survival of the predators. “The trade

will further stimulate demand in Asia for lion bones and perpetuate the demand

for tiger-bone tonics which often contain lion bone. This will, in turn, put

already beleaguered wild tigers, as well as lions, at greater risk from

poachers seeking a quick profit.

BLOOMBERG

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