Hunting and Conservation
Last night I was at a fund raising function for the SPCA in Mutare and we heard a 45 minute documentary on a hike undertaken by a party of 12 Zimbabweans from Chiwore River to Kanyemba in May this year. This is deep in the Zambezi Valley and about 100 kilometers from the Manna Pools Park which is famous for its wildlife and diversity. They walked for over 100 kilometers across country that was halfway between the Escarpment and the River. Those who know the Valley will appreciate this is wild rough country and virtually devoid of human settlement.
What shocked us all and the team that did the hike was the near total absence of any wild life – they saw 4 elephants in 8 days and some quite recent lion spoor near the Zambezi River. The speaker at the meeting remarked that 40 years ago when he had been active in this area, it had contained thousands of different species of plains game and all of the big five.
When I spent a few days at Chiwore on a recent fishing trip (much less strenuous than a 100 kilometer hike through the bush in the Valley) I also noticed a sharp reduction in the sightings of game and spoor. The area has a lot of elephant but the spoor I saw and a few sightings, all involved small, immature animals. What plains game we saw had evidently been hunted and were very nervous and ran off when they scented us or heard us approach.
Then we recently had the incident involving an American hunter who killed a famous lion (Cecil) not knowing that it was being tracked by a research team from Oxford University. To add to the misery of the hunter and his guides, a local guide who had filmed Cecil 5 years earlier when he was in his prime as a really beautiful example of a male, black mane lion in his pride, released these images to the media and triggered a global media storm.
The fact was that Cecil was in fact at the end of his life in lion terms – he was 13 years old and could not retain his place in the pride as younger males were taking over. He was unlikely to survive much longer in the real world of a lion’s life and was scavenging to try and feed himself. Most specialists would say in fact that he was an ideal candidate for a commercial hunt. An old lion with failing teeth and health can quickly turn rogue and take to hunting cattle or even humans.