“Big-game trophy decision will be announced next week but will be very hard pressed to change my mind that this horror show in any way helps conservation of Elephants [sic] or any other animal.”
I’d expect such strong condemnation of trophy hunting from a compassionate conservationist, but this was a quote from President Trump from November 2017: a Republican and an outspoken father of two proud trophy hunters, one of whom famously posed with a severed elephant tail. Then, a month ago, in an interview with Piers Morgan on the UK’s ITV, Trump expressed firm opposition to recent attempts to encourage trophy hunting imports:
“I didn’t want elephants killed and stuffed, and have the tusks bought back into this. And, people can talk all they want about preservation and all of the things that they’re saying, where money goes toward – well, money, in that case, was going to a government which was probably taking the money, okay? I do not – I turned that order [from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to allow imports of sport-hunted trophies from certain countries] around.”
Ultimately, it doesn’t matter whether or not you voted for Pres. Trump; you don’t even have to like the guy. What his comments show is that wildlife conservation is a non-partisan issue. Animals don’t have political investment, and their protection ought to stand apart from messy politics. (After all, the highly successful Endangered Species Act was passed during Richard Nixon’s Republican presidency.) Republican or Democrat, right or left – these allegiances should have no bearing on whether an animal gets to live. For the elephant who escapes butchery by a trophy hunter – who preserves her life, and her dignity, and the head attached to her body – it’s simply about freedom and survival.
The role of trophy hunting in conservation is a tug-of-war that’s been playing out for years. In 2014, the Obama administration decided that permits to import the trophies (i.e., heads and other body parts) of lions and elephants killed by hunters in Zimbabwe and Zambia should be disallowed because of a lack of sufficient evidence of a conservation benefit to trophy hunting. This compassionate decision spared the lives of countless animals and sent the crucial message that international trophy hunting harms lion and elephant populations. But, this Fall, with the change in political affiliation of the President, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) flipped its view. It now claims that trophy hunting benefits conservation “by providing incentives to local communities to conserve the species and by putting much-needed revenue back into conservation.” This opened the door to the issuance of permits for hunters to import elephant trophies from Zimbabwe.
Though Pres. Trump declared that he has ordered his administration to ban the importing of trophies, we still await an official announcement of the policy. However, this Republican President’s statements give me (and many of my colleagues) hope that the administration might make the right decision (and, unequivocally, there is only one right decision): that allowing trophy hunters to import the heads of slaughtered elephants will not advance conservation.
To wit, the African elephant population plummeted from a few million in the early 1900s to approximately 425,000 today. Though trophy hunting, poaching, and habitat loss are all to blame, the sport-hunting of elephants is undoubtedly correlated with population declines. Elephant populations are dwindling rapidly, and picking elephants off one by one as a hobby won’t increase their fragile numbers. It’s a simple concept, and the Republican President gets it; killing something does not help conserve it. Taking away does not add; it subtracts.
But, trophy hunting proponents don’t see it that way. They cloak themselves in the claim that they typically kill the old, weak members of the herd who would die soon anyway. Not true; many hunts target the large, healthy males because their heads make the most “impressive” trophies. Trophy hunters also promise that profits derived from their hunts support local African communities. To the contrary, research suggests that no more than 3% of profits normally trickle down for use in community development, and that trophy hunting usually accounts for less than 2% of a country’s tourism industry revenues. Research also concludes that a live elephant can bring in more than 30 times in conservation-focused tourism revenue than one sold and slaughtered in a trophy hunt.
As we await an official announcement of the Government’s final decision, elephants traverse the African savanna in their family groups – blissfully unaware that their safety hangs in the balance, to be determined by a handful of humans with competing vested interests thousands of miles away. But, it doesn’t need to be this way. We can all agree – Democrats and Republicans, as well as Independents and, really, all humans – that trophy hunting is a barbaric hobby to kill wild animals, not to conserve them. I hope that our decision-makers keep their heads about them so that the animals can also keep theirs.
For the animals,