‘Ideal Huntable Male Lion’ Defined by Dallas Safari Club

The Dallas Safari Club (DSC) today announced a formal position statement defining the ideal huntable male lion.

The position reads: “The ideal huntable male lion is at least six years of age and is not known to head a pride or be part of a coalition heading a pride with dependent cubs.”

DSC is encouraging safari operators and hunters across Africa to use this definition within their own conservation ethos. For its part, DSC adopted a new club policy: “No DSC member will be eligible for any DSC recognition or trophy award unless the member’s lion trophy submission is a fully mature lion as determined in the sole discretion of the DSC awards committee.”

“Research shows that hunting male lions at least five years of age has no negative effect on populations,” said Ben Carter, DSC executive director. “We adopted a six-year rule because we recognize the difficulties in judging age, especially in field conditions, and we chose to air on the side of caution. Hunters have always led the charge for conservation. This is one more example.”

DSC President Allen Moore added, “DSC and conservation authorities across Africa are concerned about the developing possibility of reduced harvest quotas on lions. If that happens, the resulting loss of revenue from lion hunters would be a significant setback for conservation, not only for lion populations, but also for other species such as buffalo and plains game.”

Urging hunters to self-impose harvest restrictions is seen as a better alternative.

The DSC six-year rule is endorsed by leading authorities on lion conservation, outfitters and DSC leaders, listed below:

Dr. Colleen Begg, project leader, Niassa Carnivore Project, Mozambique
Greg Bond, DSC past president, OHAA recipient
Ben Carter, DSC executive director
Richard Cheatham, DSC past president and board member
Dale Desfountain, Desfountain & Jones, Ltd., Zimbabwe
J. Lane Easter, DVM, Diplomate American College of Veterinary Surgeons, co-founding member Lion Conservation Task Force
Dave Fulson, Safari Classics and Chifuti Safaris, Zimbabwe
George Hartley, Tanzania Game Trackers (Friedken Fund), Tanzania
Chris Hudson, DSC board member
Dr. Luke Hunter, president, Panthera
K. H. Leatham, Mazunga Safaris, Bubye Valley Conservancy, Zimbabwe
Shane Mahoney, Conservation Visions, executive director at Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, director Conservation Force
Michel Mantheakis, Michel Mantheakis Safaris, Tanzania
Allen Moore, DSC president
Aaron Nielson, Global Hunting Resources, co-founding member Lion Conservation Task Force
Greg Oliver, DSC past president and board member, OHAA Recipient
Dr. Craig Packer, Distinguished McKnight University Professor, Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior, University of Minnesota; principal investigator, Serengeti Lion Project
Wilson Stout, DSC member, OHAA recipient
Paul Trethowan, WildCRU, Oxford University
Dr. Paula A. White, director, Zambia Lion Project, Center For Tropical Research, University of California, Los Angeles
Dr. Karyl L. Whitman, wildlife biologist, co-author, “A Hunter’s Guide to Aging Lions in Eastern and Southern Africa”

For several years, DSC has been funding scientific research on African lions. Understanding lion population dynamics is one of many projects supported by DSC grants to advance conservation, education and hunter advocacy worldwide.

About Dallas Safari Club (DSC)
Desert bighorns on an unbroken landscape, stalking Cape buffalo in heavy brush, students discovering conservation. DSC works to guarantee a future for all these and much more. An independent nonprofit organization since 1982, DSC has become an international leader in conserving wildlife and wilderness lands, educating youth and the general public, and promoting and protecting the rights and interests of hunters worldwide. Get involved at www.biggame.org.

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