Remember Cecil the Lion?

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Do you remember Cecil the Lion? He was a loin in Zimbabwe, living in a protected park, somewhat habituated to human presence. A Great White Hunter, who was also a dentist in Minnesota, killed him a couple of years ago, and took a lot of heat for it. The real story of what happened is now out in a brand new book by biologist Andrew Loveridge.

The real story is much worse than I remember. The dentist and his Zimbabwean hunting guide used a dead elephant to attract Cecil out of the park, where the dentist shot the lion with an arrow. It took about a half a day for the lion to die, and apparently it was pretty nasty. The hunt itself was illegal.

There is a special circumstance in which one can possibly excuse a hunt. There are times when close quarter game management requires putting an animal down. One case I remember from South Africa involved an older and very large white rhino. The animal was actually attacking other rhinos because it had gotten its limbic functions messed up with dementia, and probably was nearly blind.

When grandpa is really old, nearly blind, and very confused with dementia, he may do inconvenient things, and may even hurt himself, but he does not careen across the landscape ramming his giant nose horn into endangered animals. So, that particular rhino needed to be put down.

The people who ran the preserve where this rhino lived did not run a hunting camp, but rather, they were trying to save the rhinos. Given the circumstance, they got a legal hunting permit, and sold it to an American for $10,000, which they then used for helping to save more rhinos.

The American came out. They pretended to track the big old rhino for a few days, then let the guy shoot it. When the game keepers who managed this told me the story less than a year after it happened, they were literally in tears over the death of their rhino, and felt horrible about their role in it, but they knew it would have been them shooting it themselves under the circumstances, and this way they helped to fill in the enormous funding gap that occurs because outrage over hunting rare animals is massive but the dollars that spring from the outraged are rare.

Anyway, the killing of Cecil the lion was not that. Not even close.

And, it is now memorialized and described in the book Lion Hearted: The Life and Death of Cecil & the Future of Africa’s Iconic Cats.

“Until the lion has its own storyteller, tales of the lion hunt will always glorify the hunter.” —Zimbabwean proverb

In 2015, 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.

In the tradition of Born Free and Gorillas in the Mist, Lion Hearted chronicles Loveridge’s long acquaintance with a host of charismatic lions that his team has tracked, often from birth to death. Born and raised in Zimbabwe, Loveridge learned to love predators at the knee of his father, an eminent herpetologist who stored baby crocodiles in the family bathtub. After earning his doctorate at Oxford, he seized an invitation to study the lions of Zimbabwe’s Hwange National Park. There he meets Stumpy Tail, who, despite her name, has the dignity of the Queen of the Animal Kingdom; Dynamite, a venerable coalition leader who, muscled out by younger males, sets off on an incredible thirty-seven-day, 137-mile journey to find a new home; and Kataza, who escapes another lion’s claws, and whom Loveridge twice saves from death at the hands of humans. And, of course, there is Cecil. Dethroned in an epic battle, he forms an alliance with a former rival. He also becomes a favorite of photographers and tourists—until the fateful night when a Minnesota dentist and his hunting guide entice the trusting cat with a free meal.

Loveridge unravels the complexities of lion society and the dangers the cats face both within their ranks and from the outside world. Despite their ruthless reputation, lions can form deep emotional bonds—females live in prides, a sisterhood of mothers, daughters, sisters, and aunts that can exhibit military precision when hunting in formation; males band together in coalitions to vie for control of territory and the female prides. They also display a wide range of emotional behavior, including mourning the loss of their mates, partners, and cubs.

Africa’s lion population is estimated to have shrunk by 43 percent in the last twenty years. There may now be as few as 20,000 wild lions across the entire continent—far fewer than the number of elephants. While deploring the killing of lions for sport, Loveridge does not believe that banning trophy hunting, by itself, will halt the decline of Africa’s lion populations. He sees greater threats in human population growth, the loss of habitat to agriculture, and the illegal trade in lion body parts for use in traditional medicines. And he offers concrete proposals for averting the lion’s extinction.

More than a gripping detective story, Lion Hearted is an exploration of humanity’s relationship with the natural world and an attempt to keep this majestic species from disappearing. “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.”

Check out Lion Hearted: The Life and Death of Cecil & the Future of Africa’s Iconic Cats.

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3 thoughts on “Remember Cecil the Lion?

  1. Few people realise how important apex predators are.

    Of course, the ultimate apex predators on Earth are humans, but this isn’t about us. It’s about the importance of the other apex predators. Humanity is more of a super-predator, operating in an unsustainable fashion.

    The Importance of Apex Predators for a Healthy Ecosystem.

    Walter Palmer was certainly acting in ‘an unsustainable fashion’ and this could be another task for the UN to control these morons and protect the rangers and warden trying to protect the species to often shot just for the hell of it or monetary gain feeding woo medicine. That latter demonstrates that some humans are not fully evolved, most of us are not, but some still act as if they are ruled by their Neanderthal genes, don’t they Palmer.

    I heard his dental practice tanked, is that true? Some karma, not nearly enough on its own, if so.

    Cue howls of rage from the primitives of the NRA.

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