Marc Bekoff,
Psychology Today / Animal Emotions
March 2018
The killing of Cecil the lion just outside Hwange National Park by a trophy hunter caught the global public’s attention to a degree that is unprecedented for an animal/ environmental story.
Image: Courtesy of Andrew Loveridge
Until the lion has its own storyteller, tales of the lion hunt will
always glorify the hunter.
—Zimbabwean proverb
I recently learned of a new book by Oxford University zoologist, Dr. Andrew Loveridge (link is external), titled Lion Hearted: The Life and Death of Cecil & the Future of Africa's Iconic Cats. Being one of millions of people worldwide who were aghast and angry at Cecil's unnecessary death, some reasonably calling trophy hunting's gratuitous violence murder, I immediately reached out to Dr. Loveridge, who knew Cecil well, to see if he could take some time to answer a few questions about his book. I wanted to hear a "first-hand, up-close-and-personal" account of what happened to Cecil, what led up to his being slaughtered, and what the long-term effects might be. I was thrilled that Dr. Loveridge was able to answer these questions.
The basic facts surrounding Cecil's death and Dr. Loveridge's research are as follows: "In 2015 (link is external), an American hunter named Walter Palmer shot and killed a lion named Cecil. The lion was one of dozens slain each year in Zimbabwe, which legally licenses the hunting of big cats. But Cecil’s death sparked unprecedented global outrage, igniting thousands of media reports about the peculiar circumstances surrounding this hunt. At the center of the controversy was Dr. Andrew Loveridge, the zoologist who had studied Cecil for eight years. In Lion Hearted, Loveridge pieces together, for the first time, the fascinating life and murky details of this beloved lion’s slaying."
"I’ve become increasingly aware of this field. Having been a field
biologist and behavioural ecologist for many years it seems to me there is
no question that mammals and birds (and perhaps even many vertebrate taxa)
are anything but highly sentient and we should treat them with care and
recognise they have an intrinsic value and move away from commoditisation of
wild animals."
Our interview went as follows:
1. Why did you write Lion Hearted: The Life and Death of
Cecil & the Future of Africa's Iconic Cats?
The killing of Cecil the lion just outside Hwange National Park by a trophy
hunter caught the global public’s attention to a degree that is
unprecedented for an animal/ environmental story. Between July and September
2015 Cecil was mentioned in 94,000 print media articles and 695,000 social
media posts. With this kind of attention focused on the species that the
WildCRU (link is external) research team and I had been studying for 20
years this seemed the perfect opportunity to raise awareness about the
threats that African lions face. My motivation was to tell the story through
the lens of my own experience and the stories of individual lions that I’ve
studied. There is an extensive scientific literature on lions (to which the
WildCRU team has contributed significantly), but much of this is
inaccessible to the general public. My experience engaging with the public
and media in the months after Cecil’s death suggested that, beyond the
basics, people were largely unaware of the pressures lions face and
conservation needs of the species. For instance it is a common misconception
that lions are relatively common (actually populations have declined by 43%
in the last 20 years) others were astonished (and appalled) that trophy
hunting of lions was legal in many African countries. I want the book to
highlight these and other issues.
You clearly knew Cecil as a sentient being and an iconic individual.
What was your reaction when you learned he'd been shot -- trophy hunted --
with an arrow and didn't die for around 12 hours?
Learning about the behavioural ecology, particularly of long-lived species,
often hinges on monitoring individuals over long time periods. This was the
case with Cecil, a lion whose life, behaviour and place in lion society the
WildCRU team and I had studied for 7 years.
Scientists are taught to be objective observers, but this is not the human
condition -- we’re hard wired to engage emotionally and it is difficult (and
perhaps perverse) to reduce a study animal entirely to a series of numbers
on a datasheet. A few months before he was shot I sat in a vehicle a few
meters from Cecil and he hardly paid us any notice. He was completely
habituated to vehicles having lived in a photographic safari area most of
his life. He was trusting and at ease with the presence of people and in
retrospect it is obvious that he did not stand a chance when hunters
Bronkhorst and Palmer shot him with an arrow.
It is troubling when an obviously sentient animal dies in cruel and callous
circumstances. The mistreatment of Cecil was even more distressing given how
well he was known and the fact that he was so obviously habituated to
people.
What are some of the major messages of your book?
Lions are complex to conserve in poor African countries where conservation
needs conflicts with development and growing populations of impoverished
people. Human populations will double from 1 billion to 2 billion in the
next 50 years, putting ever more pressure on remaining wild habitat. The
future of lions hinges almost entirely on long-term protection of their
habitat. If we want to see wild animals and wild places in Africa in the
future we need to rethink how conservation is implemented, moving away from
the ‘if it pays it stays’ paradigm to one where conservation is heavily
subsidised, ideally as a global priority. We also need to re-evaluate how we
interact with nature and start treating it as a priceless treasure rather
than a resource to be exploited.
Why do you think that the killing of Cecil angered so many people worldwide,
including many who had never before paid attention to, or did much about,
such premeditated cruelty? Was it that it was clear that he had suffered a
lot before dying, was it because of the way he was killed by a rich American
dentist and the killer's nonchalance and arrogance, or a combination of
these and other factors?
I examine the phenomenon and motivations behind the public reaction to
Cecil’s death in Lion Hearted. To somewhat summarise this: there is an
increasingly large segment of western society that cannot comprehend the
motivation for killing animals for pleasure, let alone killing obviously
sentient, intelligent and social animals like lions or elephants. I believe
this was is a significant factor driving much of the public indignation.
Other reasons are the lion was named (we identify more easily with
individuals), perpetrators were identified, the dubious circumstances
surrounding the activity, and the cruelty of the act. Once the perpetrators
had been identified and allegations of previous misconduct were unearthed by
the media, their lack of remorse also contributed to the sense of moral
outrage.
Did the killing of Cecil have much of an effect on curtailing trophy hunting
and the future protection of lions and other animals?
Hunting is deeply entrenched in the philosophy of African conservation, game
(or hunting) reserves having been established long before strict preserves
or national parks. It is also a major part of the conservation strategies of
a significant subset of African countries. As such it will not be simple to
dislodge. The solution is to give African countries better alternatives for
conservation, and this may simply mean wealthy countries (or even wealthy
individuals) subsidising conservation for the foreseeable future.
Given the vast majority of trophy hunters are from the USA and Europe, I
believe that change will come from the evolving trade policies of western
countries which restrict trade (including importation of hunting trophies)
in endangered and threatened species. The Cecil incident put all of this
very much under the spotlight and increasingly into the public discourse.
I'm a strong supporter of the growing field of compassionate conservation.
Do you think that those who advocate for compassionate conservation can play
a role in the future protection of lions and other animals? [I write more
about compassionate conservation in "Compassionate Conservation Matures and
Comes of Age," laying out its four basic principles and other matters with
which it's concerned, and in "Compassionate Conservation Meets Cecil the
Slain Lion."]
I’ve become increasingly aware of this field. Having been a field biologist
and behavioural ecologist for many years it seems to me there is no question
that mammals and birds (and perhaps even many vertebrate taxa) are anything
but highly sentient and we should treat them with care and recognise they
have an intrinsic value and move away from commoditisation of wild animals.
Who is your intended audience?
I wrote this book for a general audience. It is largely autobiographical and
it is deliberately not a science book, though it contains facts and
scientific findings about lion behaviour and conservation. I have tried to
use my own experiences as an African field biologist and the stories about
study lions to provide a lens through which to view the issues surrounding
lion conservation and the challenges conservationists face. It is to some
extent also about the evolution of my own viewpoint away from ‘sustainable
use’ as a conservation tool and my growing scepticism that this is a viable
way for modern society to interact with nature.
What are some of your current and future projects?
A big focus of WildCRUs work is working with local people to find ways for
them to co-exist with large predators without resorting to lethal control.
We have established a ‘Lion Guardians' programme which employs local people
to protect both lions and people and livestock in human communities
surrounding Hwange National Park. So far we have reduced the incidence of
livestock loss to predators by 50%, which in turn has reduced the need to
kill predators in retaliation. I mention this programme and problems people
face in Lion-Hearted.
With Professor David MacDonald, Dr. John Vucetich, and other colleagues I
have been working on an ethical evaluation of lion trophy hunting. This has
been an exciting and revealing project that has helped me to better
understand the interplay between lion conservation and ‘sustainable’ use. We
should be submitting this for publication in the peer reviewed literature in
the next week or so.
Conserving habitat and wildlife landscapes is critical to the future of
African conservation. We are using ecological data we have collected from
study lions, particularly data from GPS such as the one Cecil was wearing to
develop landscape models that will allow conservation managers to prioritise
the most important habitat linkages between protected areas. We have had
some great reactions to this initiative from managers, particularly in
Botswana.
Is there anything else you'd like to tell readers?
Conservation of species like lions, elephants, chimps, gorillas, and others
is a global responsibility. We can’t just leave it to cash strapped African
governments with their many pressing humanitarian priorities and limited tax
base to cover the significant costs of conserving species that global
society values (and often because of poverty and the danger many of these
species pose, African citizens don’t). The ethos of sustainable use to
generate revenue to cover the costs of conservation has largely failed
(simply because it can’t generate enough revenue to cover the costs and is
prone to corruption and mismanagement). If we want to conserve the remaining
wild places of the world we need to move to a position where conservation is
subsidised, perhaps through international aid or philanthropy. It is a model
that is already showing significant promise across Africa. Ultimately it
makes sense to do this as increasingly degraded environments further
impoverish Africans.
Killing animals "humanely" in the name of conservation remains incredibly
inhumane
“Lions are one of the most beloved animals on the planet,” Loveridge observes. “They are the national symbol of no fewer than fifteen countries. . . . Surely, we can think of a better way to save the wild animals we love besides killing them.”
Thank you so much, Andrew. I truly appreciate your taking the time to answer these questions from your perspective as someone who knew Cecil well and as a participant observer of conservation efforts to save large cats and other animals. It's incredibly distressing that Africa's lion populations have shrunk by around 43% in the last 20 years. In an increasingly human-dominated world, I hope people will begin to think about and use non-lethal methods to foster peaceful coexistence among humans and other animals globally. Killing animals in the name of conservation has to stop.