SREL Reprint #3822

 

Anthropogenic mortality risk of lions depends on a combination of environmental, climatic, and cultural factors within a Sub-Saharan African ecosystem

Dipanjan Naha1,2, J. Werner Kilian3, Claire Goelst4, Claudine Cloete3, and James C. Beasley1,5

1University of Georgia, Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, Aiken, SC, USA
2Ongava Research Centre, Outjo, Namibia
3Etosha Ecological Institute, Okaukuejo, Etosha NP, Namibia
4Department of Ecology, Evolution & Environmental Biology, Columbia University, New York, USA
5University of Georgia, Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, Athens, GA, USA

Abstract: Human-caused mortality is a major cause of decline for large carnivore populations worldwide. Here we use a long-term data compiled from 1980 to 2018 to highlight the possible linkages between conflict-related mortality of lions (Panthera leo) and diverse socioecological factors in the Greater Etosha Landscape (GEL) surrounding Etosha National Park (ENP) in northwestern Namibia. We also use conflict-related mortality records (2001–2018) to model the spatial risk of fatality for lions from anthropogenic mortality, identify the major predictors of mortality, and map potential hotspots of anthropogenic mortality across the GEL. There were 698 conflict related lion mortalities reported between 1980 and 2018 with an average annual mortality of 22 lions (SE 16), although these are likely underestimates as not all anthropogenic mortality may have been reported. Conflict-related anthropogenic mortality of lions peaked during the cold dry season when availability of water was limited and game movements were concentrated around perennial waterpoints, and was greater in areas with localized livestock populations and low woody cover. Our landscape risk analysis revealed that areas bordering ENP function as ecological traps with certain pockets within the GEL acting as hotspots of conflict-related mortality. The majority of the conflict-related lion mortality was reported from commercial freehold farms reflecting Namibia’s colonial history and land ownership. Our findings suggest that mitigation measures to reduce human-lion conflict at the interface of ENP and other protected areas in Sub-Saharan Africa need to consider both ecological and cultural factors to have maximal impact. Given the high conflict-related mortality of lions in the landscape surrounding ENP, a conservation management strategy is critically needed to ensure human-lion coexistence within the GEL.

Keywords: Conflict: carnivore: retaliation: risk: hotspot: predictor: conservation

SREL Reprint #3822

Naha, D., J. W. Kilian, C. Goelst, C. Cloete, and J. C. Beasley. 2025. Anthropogenic mortality risk of lions depends on a combination of environmental, climatic, and cultural factors within a Sub-Saharan African ecosystem. Global Ecology and Conservation 59(e03514).

 

This information was provided by the University of Georgia's Savannah River Ecology Laboratory (srel.uga.edu).