Decimation of wildlife after hunting ban in Kenya.

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H&Hhunter

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In 1977 Kenya banned all big game hunting in the name of conservation. At the time Kenya was home to more than 150,000 elephant and numerous black rhino. The net result of stopping legal sport hunting in Kenya? Today fewer than 20,000 elephant remain and the black rhino is virtually extinct. When animal rights groups win animals lose. Read the article below and try to understand that emotionally based wildlife management decisions are extremely harmful to wildlife.

KENYA'S 35-Year Hunting Ban - For What??
Joe Coogan's Sundowner Tales
(This article was published in 2011 so keep in mind when ages and dates are quoted, the article however remains a compelling one)
Poaching in Tsavo National Park between 1974 and 1976 caused the elephant population to plummet almost 45%, from 35,900 to 20,200.

If a elephant bull had been born in 1977, today he'd be approaching 35 years old - a mature animal that would have had plenty of opportunity to pass on his DNA. If it was the right kind and given a nutrient-rich habitat providing him plentiful and nutritious forage, his tusks might be approaching the century mark in weight: 100 pounds per tusk. That is, if he had not been born in Kenya. For had he been, the odds of him living much past his teenage years wouldn't have been good - ironic considering that Kenya banned big-game hunting 35 years ago under the auspices of concern for the future of their wildlife.

And if someone had told me back in 1972, when I left Kenya to take up a safari job in Botswana with Ker, Downey & Selby Safaris, that within the next 20 years elephant numbers in Kenya (then estimated at more than 150,000) would plummet to less than 20,000, I could not have conceived of it in my wildest imagination, much less that Kenya's black Rhino would also be brought to the brink of extinction. During the previous six years I'd hunted much of Kenya's prime big-game real estate-areas where black rhinos were so common they posed a serious threat to anyone walking unarmed through the bush. And elephants, depending on the rains and time of season, seemed to be everywhere.

On May 19, 1977, Kenya succumbed to pressures, both internal and from the outside, banning legal managed big-game hunting. The move was supported by ill-informed opinions and emotional reactions from the world press about the rising price of ivory and consequent poaching that had become so blatant, that it was impossible to ignore.

Blindly accepting the assumed wisdom of the hunting ban, the New York Times proudly announced in a bold-faced headline: "KENYA BANS HUNTING TO SAVE ITS BIG GAME." Kenya's then Minister of Tourism and Wildlife defended his government's decision in an article by stating, "Having looked at everything, we decided to make the sacrifice in the interests of conservation for future generations." The UN Environment Program also hailed the hunting ban in terms of the future, describing the closure of legal hunting as "an electrifying and bold move," and a step that millions of people...interested in East African Wildlife" would be "greatly encouraged" by.

But the ultimate irony was lost in the midst of celebrating the hunting ban with over-confident delight. What most of the world failed to recognize was that the ban removed from the bush one of the most effective deterrents against poaching the country had at its disposal - the professional hunters, many of whom were honorary game wardens with arresting powers. These were men who spent most of each year in the bush on safari, and could either take direct action against the poaching they discovered or, at the very least, report it to the authorities who would, hopefully, take action.

By 1977, there was no doubt that Kenya had a problem with its "dwindling wildlife." Take, for example, the number of elephants being killed at that time. Overall, the annual slaughter amounted to some 15% of the country's 100,000-plus elephant population. Between 1974 and 1976 it was estimated that one population fell almost 45%, from 35,900 to 20,200. It hardly seemed feasible that the country's 106 licensed PH's and their clients could account for those kinds of numbers, especially since elephant hunting had been closed since 1973. The specific area where the dramatic plunge in elephant numbers had occurred was in Tsavo National Park, where no legal hunting of any kind had ever been allowed.

The "ivory scandal" that had become an open secret throughout Kenya began brewing in 1973, the minute legal elephant hunting was stopped. The slaughter quickly became serious and involved people at the highest levels of government. Furthermore, rumor had it that it was being facilitated by the complacency, if not connivance, of high-up game department officials themselves - the very ones meant to protect the game. Whether they held a gun or a pen, the future of wildlife was literally in their hands. These officials knew only too well that the presence of legal hunting safaris in the field was a distinct deterrent to the poaching that was either being condoned by the game department or actually controlled by it.

At the same time, Kenya was receiving significant financial aid from the World Wildlife Fund as well as tens of millions of dollars in loans from the World Bank. These two bodies, probably well intentioned, but naive, tried to stop the elephant killing by threatening to stop both aid and loans if Kenya didn't do something about it. To keep the money flowing and avoid arresting the president's family, ministers and high-up officials for running ivory poaching, the easiest solution, and what the World Bank was urging, was to ban legal hunting. In 1977, Kenya did just that, signing off on weightless and ineffectual legislation that the world applauded.

While the closure of legal hunting was issued under the empty gesture of bringing poaching under control, stories about board members of the East African Professional Hunters"s Association (EAPHA) meeting with government officials to discuss the situation circulated around Nairobi. The EAPHA proposed a plan to government that would, in effect, establish a highly organized and highly-effective anti-poaching effort. The plan would serve many purposes, not to mention utilizing all of the safari industry personnel, including professional hunters, their trackers and crew who, thanks to the hunting ban, had suddenly been forced out of work. But the mere suggestion of the proposal caused an immediate and negative reaction from government officials. Not only was the board told "no" to their plan, but when the meeting was adjourned they were instructed to never bring it up again. The government had absolutely no interest in implementing an anti-poaching plan!

The devastating poaching that followed Kenya's hunting ban will mark the 1970s and 1980's as the bloodiest period in Kenya's wildlife history, if not in all Africa's history. Poaching escalated unchecked to unprecedented levels and, eventually, by 1989, brought Kenya's elephant population down to a low of 16,000.

"Since then," according to statistics gathered by Thomas McIntyre, Sports Afield's Backcountry columnist, who hunted in Kenya prior to the ban, "the number of elephants has grown back to between 27,000 and 32,000, which, in news reports, comes off as Kenya's having miraculously doubled the population - yes, except for there being about 135,000 fewer elephants than when they started being "fully protected" back in 1973.

"Today, Kenya, speaking with an authority that defies the very concept of legitimacy, is the most vocal and pious governmental opponent of the easing of any sanctions on the regulated international trade in ivory. Easing of those sanctions is favored by the African countries that both permit hunting and still have abundant elephants."

At maturity elephants have only two enemies - time and man. The paradox is that while man is the elephant's biggest threat, he is, at the same time, the only hope for the elephant's salvation. That is, if the right decisions are taken. The most crucial factor impacting on the elephants' survival is economics.

Legal, managed hunting of elephants used to account for the single biggest income factor generated through game license and export fees. Most of the countries that allow controlled and managed elephant hunting benefit from the foreign income derived from visiting sportsmen. These moneys provide the incentive for the countries to look after their elephants through well-considered conservation practices. As such, hunting is a great benefit to the elephant as witnessed in countries such as Tanzania and Botswana where legal hunting of elephants still takes place.

Even mainstream media sources such as the Financial Times ran articles explaining how little money generated by eco-tourism finds its way into the hands of communities that must coexist with large mammals, compared with the much greater percentages of revenues from hunting that goes to locals. And Dr. Peter Lindsay of the University of Pretoria, a non-hunter, was quoted as saying that, in Africa, "wildlife has to pay for itself" because "if local people do not benefit, it is usually lost."

So, what is the situation in Kenya today? There is still poaching going on, but as with much of Africa, it is an ongoing problem that takes constant monitoring and action to keep it in check. The biggest threat to Kenya's wildlife is shrinking habitat due to constant encroachment of rapidly expanding human populations. This causes the subsequent constant conflict that wildlife faces with agricultural interests.

Take, for example, the lion/people battle taking place in Masailand. Historically speaking, the Masai have always fought lions to keep them from eating their livestock and, sometimes, even themselves. But this was a noble endeavor taken up with shield and spear to deal with problem lions, one at a time. Today, Kenya lions, though protected, are succumbing to chemical poisons that are doused on meat or poured into waterholes. Its effective indeed, not only wiping out complete prides of lions at a time, but also the attendant scavengers, including leopards, hyenas, jackals and vultures that eat what is left of tainted meat or drink from contaminated waterholes. Thirty-five years ago, it was estimated that Kenya had around 20,000 lions; today, it has less than 2,000.

As recently as 2006, a "think tank" comprising members of the Kenya Wildlife Service, a conservation organization called the East African Wildlife Society, and private landowners concluded that "sustainable, science guided consumptive utilization (read: "licensed hunting") was the way to establish a monetary value for wildlife among local people and thereby guarantee its future in Kenya. After a year of strenuous effort and enticing hope, the government of Kenya announced that the ban on big-game hunting would continue. And so it does. For those of us fortunate to have seen Kenya in pre-hunting ban days, "hope springs eternal," and we place our faith solidly in the certain knowledge that there's always the "maybe" of next year.
Taken from;- African Hunting Gazette, Oct/Nov/Dec 2011
 
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People want simple solutions to complex problems. Knee jerk reactions which seem helpful initially often have unintended consequences. Too many people today want a 30 second sound bite that will explain everything they need to know. While informative, I'd bet fewer than 50% will actually read the entire article.
 
As recently as 2006, a "think tank" comprising members of the Kenya Wildlife Service, a conservation organization called the East African Wildlife Society, and private landowners concluded that "sustainable, science guided consumptive utilization (read: "licensed hunting") was the way to establish a monetary value for wildlife among local people and thereby guarantee its future in Kenya. After a year of strenuous effort and enticing hope, the government of Kenya announced that the ban on big-game hunting would continue.

It's hard for the bleeding heart tor realize hunters are great stewards of the land. Oftentimes the best.
 
Very well written and fact filled H&HHunter. If only these facts had been understood, more so accepted by the tree huggers. But sadly, their hatred for the hunters has created a blind perception of who we are, and what we actually accomplish as responsible individuals and organizations. Lets face it, no one wants game numbers to be healthy more than hunters, for obvious reason. But the ill conceived methods and tactics employed by the left, have almost always resulted in disastrous results. Then when everything back fires, they develop a new ill conceived solution, once again targeting us, often resulting in further depletion of the animals, or what ever their particular "save this" interest may be at the time.

Thanks you H&HHunter.

GS
 
What is most sad about what happened in Kenya is that the people responsible still do not get it, and believe that their policies were miserable failures only because they did not do enough of it.
 
You are right alsaqr. I'll edit it to try and make it easier to read. BTW feel free to send me a PM on stuff like this, that way I'll get it sooner. Let me know if the spacing helped and anything else I can do to assist in easing the pain of reading that monster.:)
 
I have discussions/arguments with anti-hunters all the time. In a nutshell, they simply do not understand. They do not, and cannot, understand that hunting and proper game management protects and perpetuates the species. No matter what it is. It also protects and perpetuates habitat. They don't understand that hunters have more respect, compassion and affection for the animals we hunt than they do. That we put more money and effort into the cause than they ever will. They simply cannot see beyond the act of killing the critter that their heart bleeds for. They don't understand hunters and they don't understand hunting. They really, truly, honestly, do not "get it".
 
Craig - EXACTLY. Some people actually think hunters just walk out in the woods with their extremely scary guns (almost as scary as "assault rifles"), blast indiscriminately on full auto. And drive home leaving hundreds of carcases to rot while the one prime specimen is thrown across the hood.
 
I have discussions/arguments with anti-hunters all the time. In a nutshell, they simply do not understand.

That is because they are convinced they are right and are just as frustrated that they cannot make you understand their position. Most of them are probably good people who mean well.

I've fallen into the same trap of trying to convince people too. I've found it best to just no longer go there with certain people. Most people are more open minded and will listen to reason. I've come to the conclusion that it is best to concentrate on those who have not closed their minds and provide facts. This article is a good example that would work very well to help a lot to see the light.
 
Let me know if the spacing helped and anything else I can do to assist in easing the pain of reading that monster.

Thanks very much; it's very easy to read. It's a great article.

Despite the devastation to Kenya's wildlife, the anti-hunters still see the banning of hunting there as their proudest moment.

i've always had difficulty attempting to reason with anti-hunters: At age 76 i no longer try.
 
Excellent article. Thanks for posting. The same thing happens with many species. That is, when hunting is banned or excessively controlled, the numbers of wildlife typically declines. Hunting of white tail deer in Kansas was banned for many years because of low numbers. Through a concerted effort by hunters and others combined with managed hunting, the number of white tail deer in Kansas borders on nuisance numbers. Thousands are shot each year and the numbers continue to grow.
 
on the ranch i hunted in botswana last year there were two new trackers who came from kenya as they lost their jobs because of the no hunt policies. as repeated here and other posts, where hunting is offered and controlled the game species expand and grow letting every one enjoy the animals,hunters,photo op,s and nature groups. eastbank.
 
I have discussions/arguments with anti-hunters all the time. In a nutshell, they simply do not understand. They do not, and cannot, understand that hunting and proper game management protects and perpetuates the species. No matter what it is. It also protects and perpetuates habitat.

Yep, Craig pretty much hit it on the head. They just don't understand. They also don't realize that many of their favorite game animals are there because of stocking and reintroduction, because of hunters and sportsman's groups. Just as they don't understand how their indiscriminate feeding of that same wild game is doing more harm to the ability of that game animal to survive on it's own, than any hunter. Those same folks think it's fine to put out a birdfeeder in their back yard and then let their pet cat out to roam.

Many folks still consider all hunters as kill-all Bubba's that indiscriminately kill everything they see, while trespassing and trashing the environment at the same time. Unfortunately there are still some hunters out there like that. One reason why we as hunters need to strive to always present a positive image to the general public. At the same time we need to educate non-hunters to the positive things hunting does for everyone, and not just call them names, trash them and turn them off to any acceptance of us.

I'm in the construction business and folks with no knowledge of building or materials tell me all they time that certain projects "should not be that hard or difficult". They too don't have a clue. I don't get the job tho, by calling them stupid to their face and stomping off. I get it by explaining just what it takes to complete that project and the methods I use to assure it's being done right. I use this same approach on non-hunters to explain the benefits of hunting to the different game species and the habitat they live in. Sometimes those folks get it, sometimes they don't. I understand why many folks think that legal hunting is the bane of rare and exotic animals, because in the distant past it was. Old habits die hard. Look at the amount of folks that still overcook domestic pork for fear of "worms". We need to educate folks, not distance them. While I agree with Craig that folks do not understand, I disagree that for the most part, they cannot understand.
 
Seems to me we have enough problems with politics here in the U.S. without trying to analyze the politics in Africa. Having said that, successful game management can only happen if it's supported by the local people who live in rural areas. Luckily most of the anti-hunters in the U.S. live in the cities and that gives the rural hunting community a better chance to manage the wildlife by electing people to the State governments who support our beliefs.
 
Seems to me we have enough problems with politics here in the U.S. without trying to analyze the politics in Africa.

This very little to do with African politics and very much to do with the in your face failure that animals rights is to wildlife.
 
H&Hhunter, I'm on your side. It really gripes me to think that a group of people made the uninformed decisions in parts of Africa about how to handle the wildlife and they were in a position to implement their decisions. It has also happened here in the U.S. in the early part of the last century with the elimination of predators on the Kaibab Plateau in northern Arizona where a whole herd of mule deer was decimated. And prior to that with the killing of the buffalo herds to starve the Indians into submission.
 
Actually the whole point of this is that right now as we speak this exact same failed model is being attempted in other African countries. And if the Animal rights folks had their way it would happen right here in the good old US of A....
 
That's why State's rights here in the U.S. is so important. If wildlife is controlled at the State and Local level then wildlife management will have a better chance of actually helping the wildlife to survive. It will be harder for the animal rights people to influence the wildlife policies. There are so many countries in Africa that surely some of them will learn how to protect their animals. Sad to say, both Africa and the middle east are not a safe place to be and it will get worse in the future.
 
Sad part the black rhino and several others are now gone in this area forever. Once there were large numbers of animals and the animal rights people got their way. Unfortunately the animal rights people do not protect animals. Look at the US humane society, they claim to protect animals but yet when they can not find a home in a reasonable time for the animals, they kill them by the thousands each year.
 
Buck460XVR makes many great points here. We are the teachers, to which we must do everything in our power to pass on these traditions and ethics to the next generation. Some will never get it, and some choose have absolutely no respect what so ever for our natural resources and game.

Below is a first hand example of something I encountered this last month during spring turkey season.

I had a really bad experience this last turkey season. My Son invited a new friend to join us on the hunt, and as always, prior to the hunt we had a meeting, things like ethics and laws were reviewed and established, we take hunting very serious and respect everything it represents. I thought this fellow was on the up and up, as that was what he projected, I read him wrong, as did my son.

So on the second day of the hunt his new friend hadn't killed his bird yet, though several had been called in for him. But for what ever reason, he didn't connect, it happens, this is why it's called hunting and not shopping for your quarry. He did get to see some gobs strutting and gobbling up close and personal, we managed to give him that at least. But it was on the afternoon of that second day that he stated to me, and in a very "as a matter of fact" manner, that "regardless of whether it's a hen or tom, I'm killing it". He said this with a mannerism about him that projected anger, as if he had some how been cheated. I initially chuckled, thinking he was merely joking, until he reaffirmed that same remark with, no I'm totally serious, it's only a "explicit" turkey, whats the big deal with you and your son, and all this ethical garbage.

That did it for me, I reaffirmed the laws, ethics, and my personal feelings about such. I also tried to educate him about turkey, that if not for our efforts as hunters, turkey would have been pushed to absolute extinction long ago. And that if that's how he feels, he needs to leave, go home, cause things aren't going to end well for him if he steps over the legal line while in my presence, or if I have knowledge of such. I further stated to him that I'm not going to allow myself to be put into a position that not only defames me as a hunter, but as well risk hefty fines, confiscation of our gear and weapons, and possible jail time. We drove back to camp, he packed and was gone within 10 minutes, end of discussion.

There are some that don't care, it's not that they don't get it, they simply don't care. They treat hunting as if they have some right to kill game indiscriminately, in season or not, legal game or not, they just don't care! Sorry I'm rather irritated right now, it hasn't been but a couple weeks since that experience.

GS
 
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