Guidelines for evaluating the conservation value of African lion (Panthera leo) translocations
Becker, Matthew S.; Almeida, Joao; Begg, Colleen; Bertola, Laura; Breitenmoser, Christine; Breitenmoser, Urs; Coals, Peter; Funston, Paul; Gaylard, Angela; Groom, Rosemary; Henschel, Philipp; Ikanda, Dennis; Jorge, Agostinho; Kruger, Johan; Lindsey, Peter Andrew; Maimbo, Howard; Mandisodza-Chikerema, Roseline; Maude, Glynn; Mbizah, Moreangels; Miller, Susan M.; Mudongo, Edwin; Mwape, Henry; Mweetwa, Thandiwe; Naude, Vincent; Nyirenda, Vincent R.; Parker, Andrew; Parker, Daniel; Reid, Craig; Robson, Ashley; Sayer, Ed; Selier, S.A. Jeanetta; Sichande, Mwamba; Simukonda, Chuma; Uiseb, Kenneth; Williams, Vivienne L.; Zimba, Dennis; Hunter, Luke
Date:
2022-09-02
Abstract:
As the top predator in African ecosystems, lions have lost more than 90% of
their historical range, and few countries possess strong evidence for stable
populations. Translocations (broadly defined here as the capture and
movement of lions for various management purposes) have become an
increasingly popular action for this species, but the wide array of lion
translocation rationales and subsequent conservation challenges stemming
from poorly conceived or unsuitable translocations warrants additional
standardized evaluation and guidance. At their best, translocations fill a key
role in comprehensive strategies aimed at addressing the threats facing lions
and fostering the recovery of wild populations in their historic range. At their
worst, translocations can distract from addressing the major threats to wild
populations and habitats, divert scarce funding from more valuable
conservation actions, exacerbate conflict with humans in recipient sites,
disrupt local lion demography, and undermine the genetic integrity of wild
lion populations in both source and recipient sites. In the interest of developing
best practice guidelines for deciding when and how to conduct lion
translocations, we discuss factors to consider when determining whether a
translocation is of conservation value, introduce a value assessment for
translocations, and provide a decision matrix to assist practitioners in
improving the positive and reducing the negative outcomes of
lion translocation.