Abstract:
There are considerable challenges in the conservation of large carnivores, caused by large
area requirements, low reproduction rates and low population densities coupled with their
tendency to cause conflict with humans. Trophy hunting is one strategy to increase support
for large carnivore conservation. Leopards,Panthera pardus, rank among the most soughtafter
trophies in South Africa.However, trophy hunting has been suggested as partly responsible
for leopard population declines, and leopards are also killed in retaliatory actions. In
this study we used a stochastic population model to evaluate the relative influences of
retaliatory killing and trophy harvest on leopard population persistence, and to assess the
sustainability of the current leopard trophy harvest in South Africa. There was a stronger
effect of variation in retaliatory killing than of harvest on population persistence. Although
we found low extinction risks for South African leopards within 25 years, high risks of
population declines across a wide range of simulation scenarios call for concern regarding
the viability of the South African leopard population.We suggest that conflict mitigation may
be more effective in promoting leopard persistence than restricting trophy harvest, and that
accurate estimates of retaliatory killing are necessary for assessments of harvest
sustainability.