Lost lion population discovered in remote Ethiopia park

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http://www.cnn.com/2016/02/02/africa/lost-lion-population-discovered-ethiopia/index.html


CNN)A previously undiscovered population of lions has been found in a remote national park in Ethiopia.

Following an exploratory expedition, wildlife conservationists from Oxford University in England were able to confirm anecdotal stories from park staff and locals of lions living in the Alatash National Park in North West Ethiopia, close to the Sudan border.

"Lions are definitely present in Alatash National Park and in Dinder National Park. Lion presence in Alatash has not previously been confirmed in meetings at national or international level," said Hans Bauer, leader of the expedition.

"Considering the relative ease with which lion signs were observed, it is likely that they are resident throughout Alatash and Dinder."

Bauer estimates between 100 and 200 lions could live in the national park after considering factors like habitat, terrain and availability of prey animals.

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And while the team did not see any lions, they were able to capture clear images of the big cats on overnight trap cameras, determining that they are most likely the rare Central African sub-species.

It's an exciting prospect for conservationists who have seen the number of lions steeply decline in recent years. The number of lions across Africa has dwindled to around 20,000 and been labeled "vulnerable," by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. In comparison, the population was estimated at 400,000 lions in the early part of the last century.

"There may be as few as 1,000 lions left across the whole of western central Africa," said Mark Jones, wildlife programs manager at Born Free. "And given that these lions almost certainly belong to that same sub-species, every single population becomes really, really important."

Last year, the brutal killing of Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe sparked international outrage. But poaching is not the cause of declining numbers in the lion population across the continent, says Jones.

"Poaching for international trade isn't the main threat to lions -- certainly not in this area. Conflict with local people, and loss of habitat and loss of prey certainly is. So (the lions) need all the protection they can get and we need to work very closely with the authorities in Ethiopia and the local people in and around the park in order to achieve that."
 
Makes you wonder how many populations just arent sampled in these Species count surveys. They declare animals extirpated frequently only to suddenly "rediscover" them later on.o_O
 
I think this is amazing!
 
Yea of course it's good I just think these surveys may need a better sampling strategy.
 
If I am reading the article correctly, they think there is 100 to 200 lions present. That's a pretty large number to just rediscover. It does make you wonder how many are really out there.
 
They all escaped the Free State and migrated to Ethiopia. No other reasonable explanation.

I wonder how long the Oxford folks will take to name all the famous Ethiopian Lions. :rolleyes:
 
They all escaped the Free State and migrated to Ethiopia. No other reasonable explanation.

I wonder how long the Oxford folks will take to name all the famous Ethiopian Lions. :rolleyes:

Hey @TMS , this must be the loophole that was being talked about. :rolleyes:
 
To that point PHASA bans captive breed Lion hunting and suddenly 200 show up in Ethiopia... Coincidence????:E Rofl:
 
These "experts" are so full of shit when it comes to their surveys. Africa is a pretty damn big place and to even think you've counted and have a at least good estimate of how many lions, ele's etc are out there is a joke. Most of the tofu eating morons couldnt find their way across their local Starbucks much less Africa. Not to mention they fudge the numbers all the time to meet their agendas.
 
Of course these are the same folks that want you to believe cow farts are causing global warming and hair spray put a hole in the ozone layer in the 80's.
 
@gizmo Im always wary when an estimated population number is 20,000 or 400,000 or any large round number, I do statistics on timber for a living, and sampling surveys, it just seems very rounded. I know that any estimate is rounded to a certain degree, but there almost never seems to be another digit after the first one. the difference between 30,000 lions and 34,000 lions is a lot of lions to me.
 

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