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[新聞] 獅子數字大幅下挫非洲原野屈從的人的壓力!

Only 32,000 Lions Remain out of 100,000 Roaming Africa in the 1960s

The king of the African savannah is in serious trouble because people are taking over the continent’s last patches of wilderness on unprecedented scale, according to a detailed study released this week.

The most comprehensive assessment of lion (Panthera leo) numbers to date determined that Africa’s once-thriving savannahs are undergoing massive land-use conversion and burgeoning human population growth. The decline has had a significant impact on the lions that make their home in these savannahs; their numbers have dropped to as low as 32,000, down from hundreds of thousands estimated just 50 years ago.




The study, funded in part by the National Geographic Big Cats Initiative, was published online in this week’s journal Biodiversity and Conservation.

Some 24,000 of the continent’s remaining lions are primarily in 10 strongholds: 4 in East Africa and 6 in southern Africa, the researchers determined. Over 6,000 of the remaining lions are in populations of doubtful long-term viability. Lion populations in West and central Africa are the most acutely threatened, with many recent local extinctions, even in nominally protected areas.

“These research results confirm the drastic loss of African savannah and the severe decline in the number of remaining lions,” said Big Cats Initiative (BCI) Grants Committee Chair Thomas E. Lovejoy, University Professor for Environmental Science & Public Policy at George Mason University and Biodiversity Chair of The Heinz Center. “Immediate and major action is required to save lion populations in Africa.”

“Immediate and major action is required to save lion populations in Africa.”

African savannahs are defined by the researchers as those areas that receive between 300 and 1500 mm (approximately 11 to 59 inches) of rain annually. “These savannahs conjure up visions of vast open plains,” said Stuart Pimm, co-author of the paper who holds the Chair of conservation at Duke University. “The reality is that from an original area a third larger than the continental United States, only 25 percent remains.” In comparison, 30 percent of the world’s original rain forests remain.

Lions in West Africa are at highest level of risk, Pimm and the other researchers found. “The lions in West Africa are essentially gone,” said Pimm. “Only a radical effort can save them at this stage.”

Scientists estimated that 50 years ago, approximately 100,000 lions made their home in Africa’s iconic savannahs. This estimate was made using rough calculations of the size of remaining habitat and lion density. Our research suggests that lion populations have experienced a dramatic decline, and numbers have dropped to as low as 32,000 individuals. We compiled all of the most current available estimates of lion numbers and distribution – continent-wide reports, country-specific lion conservation strategies and action plans, and newly published lion population surveys. To fill in any gaps, we drew from the knowledge of the co-authors and colleagues working across Africa to conserve lions.

Counting carnivores is a tricky business. Individual identification is a tremendous challenge and requires high-resolution cameras or good, unobstructed views in person. They are often shy and cover large distances. Lions are difficult to count even though they are social and sleep most of the day. Only a very few lion populations are known at the individual level, such as Liuwa Plains National Park, Zambia. Individual recognition of every lion in an area requires intense study, significant resources, and low numbers of individuals. Therefore, researchers use a variety of other imperfect techniques to estimate lion population size in all other lion areas. Some more common estimation techniques include spoor tracking or call-up surveys.




What are the main causes of lion decline?

There is a variety of factors leading to lion decline across their range. One of the most important things we identified was habitat loss. People usually think of savannah Africa as being comprised of wilderness, vast open grasslands stretching to the horizon in all directions. However, our analysis showed that from an original area a third larger than the United States, only 25% remains. In comparison, 30% of the world’s original tropical rainforest remain. Most of this reduction has come in the last 50 years due to massive land-use conversion and burgeoning human population growth. Besides habitat loss, another major driver of decline is human-caused mortality. This includes poaching, retaliatory killing, and trophy hunting.

How many of the remaining 32,000 wild lions in Africa are in stable populations in viable habitat? Where are the strongholds?

Our analysis identified only 67 largely isolated areas across the entire African continent where lions might survive. Of these 67 areas, only 10 qualified as strongholds where lions have an excellent chance of survival. These strongholds are located across East and Southern Africa, but importantly no areas in West or Central Africa qualify. Unfortunately this means that for the remaining 32,000 wild lions in Africa, only approximately 24,000 are in populations that can be considered at all secure.  More than 5,000 lions are located in small, isolated populations, putting their immediate survival in doubt.

What’s the prognosis for wild lions? Extinction?

The drastic reduction in lion numbers and habitat highlighted by our research is certainly alarming from a conservation standpoint. Yet, African lions are not in immediate danger of extinction. Substantial lion populations exist in large, well-protected areas such as the Serengeti or Kruger ecosystem. Many of the remaining lion populations in East or Southern Africa are in well-protected areas such as national parks and game reserves (although some of these allow hunting). Nevertheless, this should not be used as a blanket statement; there are populations and even countries in these regions that have few or no lions remaining. Overall, lions in West and Central Africa are in the gravest danger of extinction. More than half of the populations vital to lion conservation in these regions (as noted by the IUCN) have been extirpated in the past five years, with several countries losing their lions entirely. According to our research, fewer than 500 lions remain in West Africa, scattered across eight isolated sites. This is of serious concern as these populations contain the most genetically unique lions in all of Africa and are most closely related to the Asiatic lion.




Why is it important that we try to sustain the survival of wild lions in Africa?

Large carnivores play valuable ecological roles in “top-down” structuring of the ecosystem. For instance, removal of lions may allow populations of mid-sized carnivores to explode which would have cascading impacts on other flora and fauna. From an ecological perspective, large carnivores are crucial for balanced, resilient systems. However, the lion is so much more than just the largest carnivore in Africa. It is a powerful cultural and political symbol. Attempting to list all the uses of lions in African proverbs, symbols, names etc. would be a nearly impossible task. Finally, lions are vital to the tourism trade, which in turn is economically critical for many African nations.

Source: National Geographic

很傷心,獅子的數量已經下降到如此低的數字!
叢林之王,現在因為人類發展造成威脅...
1

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  • vandas

very sad story sigh.  lion is my favorite too.
[轉貼]非洲獅子棲地少七成 是人類害的

  非洲獅子自由地奔馳在原野的景象,現在越來越少見了!受到人類大舉入侵原本動物棲息地以及盜獵的影響,過去50年來,非洲獅子棲息地已減少75%,其中又以西非的獅子受影響最為嚴重,當地政府缺乏誘因保護獅子,部分國家境內已經沒有獅子。

  美國杜克大學研究發現,非洲大陸獅子數量目前已減少至三萬2千多頭,西非的獅子受到影響最嚴重,多數國家公園內已不見獅子蹤影。50年前,非洲大陸獅群約有十萬隻,近年來由於人口增加後大舉開發草原,也導致獅子數量急遽減少,學者擔心加上目前獅群中獅子數量較稀少而且處於分散,整體獅子減少的趨勢,恐怕還會持續下去。

  研究者皮姆表示,全非洲大陸適合大量獅群棲息的地點剩67處,其中15處的獅群數量約至少有500隻,他表示,「目前可以適合獅子生存的生態系統僅剩下25%,過去這些獅子活動的範圍,大約超過美國本土面積三分之一以上。」

  國際保育團體「Panthera」負責獅子保育計畫主任韓斯切爾就表示,「西非地區的獅子受到壓力最大,因為當地政府根本缺乏直接誘因,去保護這些動物。」

  杜克大學研究者利用衛星照片,確定目前還未受到人為破壞而且適合獅子活動的地區,這些土地已快速消失,且預計未來40年內,更多適合獅子棲息的土地會消失不見。其中五個非洲國家自2002年開始,獅群就已消失不見,估計獅群數量超過千隻的非洲國家僅剩九個,其中坦尚尼亞境內獅子數量就佔去整個非洲四成。

  研究者指出,非洲獅群面對最大的問題,除了政府應該最好盡好設立保育公園的職責外,其次便是思考如何減少動物與人類的衝突。

  稍早美國漁業暨野生動物局就率先表示,目前正在研究是否將非洲獅子列入「瀕危物種法案」 (Endangered Species Act)中的動物加以保護。

  本次研究結果刊登在《Biodiversity and Conservation》期刊。


  【台灣醒報/莊瑞萌】
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