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Lions in South-Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia

United States BA0701 Offline
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Rabubi
(08-23-2024, 07:24 PM)BA0701 Wrote:
(08-23-2024, 03:16 PM)Rabubi Wrote:
(08-22-2024, 06:30 PM)BA0701 Wrote:
(08-22-2024, 01:16 PM)Rabubi Wrote:
(08-21-2024, 11:53 PM)BA0701 Wrote:
(08-21-2024, 08:27 PM)Rabubi Wrote:
(08-21-2024, 05:04 PM)Tr1x24 Wrote:
(08-19-2024, 05:21 AM)Mwk85 Wrote: Marakele, he died from injuries sustained in a fight with a younger male, believed to be Ukuva, one of the sons of Tembe that was relocated to the area some weeks back.



His opponent was treated..not sure how is this "fair" (unless he killed him straight in 1vs1)..

So, these reserves are bringing "new" younger males to the reserves (who eventually kill resident famous males) to bring diversety in the reserve? 

Thats a big "f.... u.." for the resident male, who is face of the reserve..

Yea i know they have a lot of males in these reserves with little space, but stil.

What happened to Marakele is very unfortunate but I don't believe that these reserves want to witness a bloodletting and they treated Ukuva to mitigate the results of the conflict.

Translocating this young male into the reserve is to bring genetic diversity as well as to regulate population dynamics by ousting the resident male. Addo Elephant National Park translocated lions in such a way that birth rates were relatively low to keep the density of lions manageable. In the absence of intraspecific competition, lions can breed like rabbits and the prey population will struggle to keep up with such growth in lion numbers, not to mention the other predators that share the same habitat as lions.

Does this mean Marakele deserved to die? Absolutely not. But I believe they were right in translocating Ukuva for the above reasons.

I understand their reasoning, for why they are moving these cats, and believe they were entirely well intended, it is the locations they are being moved to that causes some to question their thinking. Just look at what happened to the three Addo boys, that was a full on tragedy, especially the first male that was killed. Some things are entirely unpredictable, these are wild big cats after all, but potential conflict with other lions in the direct vicinity can surely be taken into account. If I were to dump a new and unknown lion(s) into Western Sector SS, I would be doing so with the understanding that there will be conflict, and there is a very good chance that lions would die as a result, either the new lion(s) or the existing, who call WS SS home, either way. I would, in fact, be very surprised if that didn't happen.

I totally support their attempting to keep numbers balanced, in fact if there was an agency or group that was doing that in a safer way, I would have no issue donating to them, as they clearly would have a shared goal. However, I am one that believes that nature is capable of taking care of things herself. A century ago, there was nobody moving animals from one location to another, and the numbers across all species remained in balance, things just worked, not only were the prey animals in more abundance, but so were the lions. I just believe that all of the problems that exist for all wildlife, are the direct result of action(s) taken by humans, and just like government, I do not know if humans are capable of fixing what they themselves have broken, how about letting nature take the wheel for awhile. .

We were recently discussing the numbers of lions in SS, pre-Mapogo, and it seems those numbers have never recovered to what they were. I may be critical of certain actions taken by people on the ground, but it is largely because of certain things that appear obvious to us on the outside, and if that is the case why does it seem to be less obvious to some of those on the inside. The recent relocation of the Mjejane Pride is another perfect example, did we not learn after moving the last Mpondo male and his partner to the same general area? Not to mention the leaving behind of the young male, which I believe is only going to end in one way for him. The situation of lions disappearing and being killed and attacked by humans in the Mara is another example. It seems to us on the outside, if they merely enforced the laws that exist, stop the herders from cutting down fences and driving their herds into the lions territory, it would stop a lot of what is currently happening. It is not like anyone is even asking for new laws, just asking that the laws already on the books be enforced.

I am not being critical of you at all, my friend, I know 100% that you and I are on the same side, and we share in our hopes for these animals, so, please do not take this post that way. I do, however, believe this is a really good conversation to have, and an important one, perhaps if we can all put our collective heads together, we may be able to come up with some positive ideas, which could be helpful for all involved, humans and wild creatures alike. Such things can only come from people having a well intended conversation.
No offense taken whatsover, my friend. These are indeed very good conversations to have.

It is true that relocating the young male lion should have been informed by the location of the other lions in the reserve. I can't think of any plausible reason other than maybe relocating Marakele was just not feasible logistics and cost-wise so they still introduced the young male and hoped for the best. I honestly don't know.

I agree with you on letting Mother Nature taking the wheel as it is something I too have always strongly believed in and continue to believe in. However these smaller reserves require more pretty intensive management because they are isolated and thus large animals can't naturally disperse far and wide like in the Kruger, Okavango and Serengeti-Mara ecosystems. That's why translocations are necessary because leaving everything to Nature in this context would result in serious inbreeding. This is why wildlife corridors are so critical to long-term conservation, especially here in South Africa where most of our reserves are small and isolated. The only large connected wilderness areas here are Kruger, Kgalagadi (Kalahari) and the Limpopo Valley areas.

I also agree with you on the need to just enforce the existing laws for conservation because as it is the laws are solid on paper.

Those corridors are essential, for sure. There is one leading into the Crater, and it has allowed cats from the outside into the crater, allowing greater diversity, There is a really interesting study that was done on the crater, and the impact of inbreeding, it is a fascinating read. I will link to the document at the bottom of my response. One of the key takeaways was that the sperm count in the males was slowly dropping, over decades. They were able to trace back all of the lions in the crater to three specific females, if memory serves, who were introduced in the mid 1900s, following a plague of some sort that wiped out a lot of the lion population in the crater.

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=w...WjFlv8FEj0

Thank you for sharing, my friend. This is a fascinating read indeed.

A very similar situation developed in the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park (KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) where the lion population there (+- 100) during the 1900s to early 2000s was descended from one pride. During the 90s, signs of inbreeding were observed and so the reserve translocated lions from Pilansberg and Madikwe to the existing population in an act known as 'genetic rescue".

Here is the link to the follow-up studies where the genetic effects of those translocations were assessed 10-15 years after: https://link.springer.com/article/10.100...19-01231-y

Also, there is another study where the genetic variation of various lion populations was assessed (here is the link: https://link.springer.com/article/10.100...013-0453-3) and what particularly caught my attention was the following:

"some historic lion translocations have clearly brought together different lineages, as is evident in LCU 49. Both the mt-DNA haplotype (h) and microsatellite data (Fig. 5) of Sabi Sands lions suggest they originated in the Southwestern region, possibly Botswana."

Now, if I'm not mistaken, these translocations happened when the Sabi Sands was still fenced off from the GKNP and obviously private reserves want the best-looking and most robust specimens. Given how well-renowned Botswana lions are for their size, such translocations make sense.

Excellent, thank you for sharing that link.

I am all for the translocation of lions, especially males, for the very reasons you mentioned. So often do we discuss hoping x males will stay in Sabi Sands, to bring a new bloodline into the mix, the recent Southern BDMs being a recent example of those discussions. I just wish that a safer, more thoroughly vetted method could be employed when we translocate these cats to minimize any negative impact on the existing population, as well as the translocated cats. These isolated populations, as you mentioned, are in danger of suffering long term effects, if it doesn't take place. This is a very thorough paper on the subject.

Taking Sabi Sands as an example. Prior to the 1993 removal of the fence between SS and Kruger, lions from Botswana were translocated into SS, but once those fences came down, those same animals have now been granted free movement between the reserves, diversifying the genetics of all of the cats in the region. Clearly that can only benefit the population as a whole. Prior to that decision, those populations could have been in trouble, had things continued as they were, in the same way it was beginning to affect Hluhluwe-Imfolozi Park.
I think the most ideal situation would be to translocate the new males into a reserve while relocating the resident male to another reserve (similar to Sylvester's story), however, translocations cost vast amounts of time, energy and resources so that option is unfeasible. If there is a more thoroughly vetted method for translocating animals I'm all for it but as things stand, conflicts of this nature and severity are an inherent risk that comes with translocating wildlife.

Speaking of lions translocated into the private reserves bordering Kruger, wasn't the Black Dam Male's father translocated from Namibia to Thornybush?

In all honesty, I do not know about BDMs father, but that would be very interesting, indeed, given his skull is the third largest ever measured in Timbavati. What a massive male he was. @T I N O, might know better, I know he followed BDM closely.
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(08-15-2024, 09:42 PM)Mwk85 Wrote: Future potentially looks bleak for the Mjejane Pride.
There's been a significant amount of outrage over this to the point that Jock Safari took down their post about it.


Seems, they are now not even certain it was in fact the Mjejane Pride. Are they saying this to try and calm some of the outrage? I don't know, but I believe saying they are not sure it is even the Mjejane Pride they relocated only makes things worse, along with saying they darted the lions they found together, without making sure they accounted for all members of the pride.

"Phaahla said they could not be certain if this was the same pride, because it was all in the same landscape"

"SANParks later responded on its Facebook page explaining that its team only darted lions it had found together at the time"


https://www.citizen.co.za/mpumalanga-new...-sanparks/
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Mwk85 Offline
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(09-02-2024, 10:13 PM)BA0701 Wrote:
(08-15-2024, 09:42 PM)Mwk85 Wrote: Future potentially looks bleak for the Mjejane Pride.
There's been a significant amount of outrage over this to the point that Jock Safari took down their post about it.


Seems, they are now not even certain it was in fact the Mjejane Pride. Are they saying this to try and calm some of the outrage? I don't know, but I believe saying they are not sure it is even the Mjejane Pride they relocated only makes things worse, along with saying they darted the lions they found together, without making sure they accounted for all members of the pride.

"Phaahla said they could not be certain if this was the same pride, because it was all in the same landscape"

"SANParks later responded on its Facebook page explaining that its team only darted lions it had found together at the time"


https://www.citizen.co.za/mpumalanga-new...-sanparks/


I'm not going to say what I really want to say on a count of this being a family friendly site, so I'll just say I'm having a hard time believing what they put out in regards to the situation.
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(09-03-2024, 01:43 AM)Mwk85 Wrote:
(09-02-2024, 10:13 PM)BA0701 Wrote:
(08-15-2024, 09:42 PM)Mwk85 Wrote: Future potentially looks bleak for the Mjejane Pride.
There's been a significant amount of outrage over this to the point that Jock Safari took down their post about it.


Seems, they are now not even certain it was in fact the Mjejane Pride. Are they saying this to try and calm some of the outrage? I don't know, but I believe saying they are not sure it is even the Mjejane Pride they relocated only makes things worse, along with saying they darted the lions they found together, without making sure they accounted for all members of the pride.

"Phaahla said they could not be certain if this was the same pride, because it was all in the same landscape"

"SANParks later responded on its Facebook page explaining that its team only darted lions it had found together at the time"


https://www.citizen.co.za/mpumalanga-new...-sanparks/


I'm not going to say what I really want to say on a count of this being a family friendly site, so I'll just say I'm having a hard time believing what they put out in regards to the situation.

Totally understood, believe me.
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( This post was last modified: 09-08-2024, 10:30 PM by BA0701 )

The history of Marakele at Dinokeng, right up to this very unfortunate incident. What an incredibly beautiful black maned male he was.




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@Rui Ferreira, this is the little lost cub I was referring to. It is a four part series, so I will share the final part here, but would be happy to share the entire thing if anyone is interested.




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Rui Ferreira Offline
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(10-28-2024, 01:23 AM)BA0701 Wrote: @Rui Ferreira, this is the little lost cub I was referring to. It is a four part series, so I will share the final part here, but would be happy to share the entire thing if anyone is interested.




Thank you very much!!
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Mwk85 Offline
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About a week ago three lions (2F, 1M) were found poached in the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, all three had been shot with a high caliber rifle, and all three had their heads and feet cut off. Zimparks started an investigation and found that one of their own rangers was the culprit behind the killings. Link to the article is below.

https://www.chronicle.co.zw/zimparks-ran...A&sfnsn=mo
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( This post was last modified: 10-28-2024, 08:06 PM by BA0701 )

(10-28-2024, 05:21 AM)Mwk85 Wrote: About a week ago three lions (2F, 1M) were found poached in the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, all three had been shot with a high caliber rifle, and all three had their heads and feet cut off. Zimparks started an investigation and found that one of their own rangers was the culprit behind the killings. Link to the article is below.

https://www.chronicle.co.zw/zimparks-ran...A&sfnsn=mo

"The State suspects that there could be poaching syndicates involving Rangers" Where does it end? Perhaps the possibility a life sentence might provide a deterrent, if not for the crime itself, then for the deterioration of public trust that will result from their actions. Having been a LEO for 10 years, I will never have pitty for those who bring shame to their profession.
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Spalea Offline
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May they live a long life !


[color=var(--yt-endpoint-visited-color,var(--yt-spec-text-primary))]il y a 9 heures[/color]
[color=var(--yt-spec-text-primary)]Two lions in Etosha, in the Namib Desert! An old lion, likely over 12 years old with worn-down teeth, seems to have formed a coalition with a younger male. Both must have incredible stories to tell, especially the older lion, who has survived countless dangers—including the most fearsome threat of all in this region: humans, a species that takes far more than it gives. Humans have devastated wildlife populations here, including poachers, trophy hunters, and some local residents, all of whom have done substantial damage to conservation efforts in the area. While it's common to have regulated hunting quotas in every country, we’ve observed that this balance is often ignored here, and more animals are hunted than is sustainable. We've even read about a helicopter, originally assigned solely for lion conservation and tracking in the desert, being used to locate and hunt a lion in the area. There are truly terrible things happening here. If you wish to read more on this, you might not find much on major websites. I suggest searching carefully, as discussing these topics can carry consequences, even for conservationists who risk their careers to speak out. We hope things improve in the future! Wishing the two males in the photo good fortune and safety. Photo taken by Travel With Tatekulu (a few days ago).[/color]

*This image is copyright of its original author


So sad...
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