34) HUNTING
Subsistence, commercial, and sport hunting involve the pursuit
and killing of wild animals.
SUBSISTENCE HUNTING
Subsistence hunters hunt animals for food, skins and bone, and
at some time in the history of all nations it was an essential
way of obtaining food. Today, subsistence hunting is very
important all over Africa. In Botswana bush meat (e.g. spring
hares, small antelopes, birds) is an important source of protein
for many people. Other regions where subsistence hunting is still
important include the arctic, and the rain forests of the Amazon
and Central Africa.
COMMERCIAL HUNTING
Commercial hunting, where legally carried out, involves the
killing and sale of animals surplus to the carrying capacity of
a region. The commercial value of game birds and mammals has
encouraged many farmers to run wild animals together with
domestic stock. This has resulted in an increase in numbers of
many species, for example springbok, impala, and blesbok in South
Africa, and the saiga antelope in Russia.
Illegal commercial hunters (or commercial poachers) break the law
to hunt animals for sale. This is highlighted in Africa by the
illegal hunting of elephants for their ivory, and rhinos for
their horns. No regard is given to the future of the species,
their future economic, potential or to sport. This form of
hunting is opposed by both the public and government agencies.
SPORT HUNTING
Sport hunting, where animals are not hunted for food or profit,
but for the enjoyment of the hunter, is subject to increasing
criticism. To many, it is repugnant that people should enjoy
killing animals. Those opposed to sport hunting believe that we
have no right to kill animals simply for our own enjoyment. Sport
hunting often revolves around the acquisition of a trophy.
On the other hand, the sport hunter of today does not regard the
act of killing as being the object of his sport. If it were so,
he could simply buy and kill domestic animals such as sheep or
chickens. To the sport hunter, hunting involves the challenge of
outwitting the quarry in the wild. It means learning the
behaviour of the animal, the habitats it prefers, the tracks and
signs which indicate its presence. It requires an ability to
stalk prey, and proficiency in the use of one's weapon, be it
rifle, shotgun or bow and arrow. To hunt means to be outdoors,
the more unspoilt and natural the country and the more
challenging the quarry, the greater the degree of enjoyment.
HABITAT AND SPECIES CONSERVATION
The sport hunter is prepared to pay large amounts of money for
his sport. In so doing he gives an incentive to the landowner to
maintain the natural habitats which are home for the hunted
animals. Thus large areas of land, incorporating a variety of
habitats, plants and animals are conserved because it pays the
landowner to do so.
If he was not earning money from hunters, he would have to farm
his land conventionally, with crops or domesticated livestock,
usually at the expense of wildlife.
National parks and game reserves are a very small part
(approximately 6%) of southern Africa. Wildlife in most areas
within the region faces major threats from the loss of natural
habitats for agriculture, forestry, or human settlement. These
natural habitats, and the wildlife that need them, will have to
compete on economic terms with other forms of land use if they
are to survive.
IF IT PAYS, IT STAYS
In the face of the ever expanding human population and its
demands on resources, all resources must earn money. One way of
making natural, conserved areas pay, and thus assure a future for
wild animals and habitats, is to promote well managed sport
hunting.
In the U.S.A., sport hunters requested a tax be placed on hunting
goods and that the proceeds be allocated to wildlife management.
This fund has raised over 1,89 billion dollars in the last 40
years. While several hunting groups have suggested similar
schemes in southern Africa, no such programme has yet developed.
Hi! Handsome hunting man
Fire your little gun.
Bang! Now that animal
Is dead and dumb and done.
Nevermore to peep again, creep again, leap again,
Eat or sleep or drink again, Oh, what fun!
A poem by Walter de la Mare
DID YOU KNOW?
* Hunting earn South Africa approximately R200 million each
year.
* The Wildlife Society of southern Africa was started by hunters
in 1926 when it was called the Wildlife Protection and
Conservation Society of Southern Africa.
* In nature, individual animals, usually the weak or old, are
killed by predators or parasites. This enhances the productivity
and vigour of the population.
TOPICS FOR DEBATE
* Should we reject conservation policies which ignore the right
to life of individual animals, thereby allowing them to be killed
if the species is not threatened by hunting?
* Can killing for fun ever be justified in a compassionate and
caring society? If killing is not the purpose of hunting (as many
hunters claim), why not take a camera instead of a rifle?
* Must animals be killed to raise funds for conservation? Is it
not a warped system that kills the objects of its concern in
order that they may be saved?
FURTHER READING
ON WILDLIFE CONSERVATION.
R. Thompson. United Publishers International, South Africa,
1988.
THE CONSERVATIONISTS AND THE KILLERS.
J. Pringle. T.V. Bulpin and Books of Africa, Cape Town, 1982.
THE WILDLIFE GAME.
R. Thompson. Nyala Wildlife Publications Trust, Natal, 1992.
HUNTING - ON SAFARI IN EAST AND SOUTHERN AFRICA.
A. Wynne-Jones, Southern Books, Johannesburg, 1990.
ANIMAL LIBERATION.
P. Singer. Jonathan Cape, London, 1990.
THE RIGHTS OF NATURE.
R.F. Nash. University of Wisconsin Press, 1989.
WAR ON WILDLIFE.
FALCON, address below.
CONTACT ORGANISATIONS
Professional Hunters Association of Southern Africa.
P O Box 770, Cramerview, 2060. Tel. 011-7067724.
Falcon: Front for the liberation and conservation of nature.
PO Box 755, Kloof, 3640. Tel.031-751950
Beauty Without Cruelty.
PO Box 23321, Claremont, 7735. Tel. 021-61 4583. Branches
country-wide.
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