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Lawsuit aims to save leopards from import to U.S. as hunting trophies
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https://www.humanesociety.org/...-us-hunting-trophies



Press Release October 28, 2020

Lawsuit aims to save leopards from import to U.S. as hunting trophies



WASHINGTON—Conservation and animal protection groups filed a lawsuit today challenging decisions by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that authorize leopard trophy imports from Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Mozambique and Zambia into the United States. The Center for Biological Diversity, Humane Society International, the Humane Society of the United States, and a South Africa-based photographic safari operator filed the suit.

The U.S. is a major global consumer of leopard trophies. On average the U.S. imports nearly 300 leopard trophies per year, which is 52% of all leopard trophies in trade each year. During the most recent five-year period for which data are available, the U.S. imported 1,037 leopard trophies from Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Mozambique and Zambia alone.

“Federal officials are dishing out leopard import permits right and left despite lacking the data to know how trophy hunting harms this highly imperiled species,” said Tanya Sanerib, international legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Regulations clearly require our government not to OK imports without adequate info about these splendid cats and all the ways humans are harming them. That info is key because even the stealthiest leopards can’t escape hunters’ bullets, especially when they’re hunted with baited prey.”

Leopards are vulnerable to extinction. Scientists believe that African leopard populations are plummeting due to habitat loss, prey depletion, persecution by people, poaching for the illegal skin trade and unsustainable trophy hunting. The actual rate of leopard decline remains largely unknown, and most nations lack population estimates.

“It seems inconceivable that the Fish and Wildlife Service allows U.S. trophy hunters to import hundreds of dead leopards every year, yet the agency does not even have basic information about number of animals left in the countries where they are being killed,” said Laura Smythe, staff attorney at the Humane Society of the United States. “Despite this glaring lack of data, and without even considering many of the other threats to the species, the agency is arbitrarily deciding that allowing these imports will not harm the species—it simply cannot scientifically or legally make those findings.”

Under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), leopard trade is permissible only under exceptional circumstances. Nevertheless, bowing to politics and diplomatic negotiations, parties to the international treaty recently sustained unjustifiably high quotas or caps on the number of leopards that can be traded annually as trophies. The U.S. has an independent obligation to ensure that leopard imports are not detrimental to the survival of the species based on the best biological—not political—information.

The lawsuit challenges the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s failure to meet this obligation by authorizing U.S. trophy hunters to import leopard trophies from Africa. The hunters rely on these decisions in deciding to travel to Africa to kill these animals. Due to travel restrictions and COVID-19 risks, fewer hunters are traveling to Africa, meaning the leopards covered by the challenged import authorizations are likely still alive and could still be saved from import.

Today the organizations also gave the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service notice of their intent to sue over the agency’s failure to make a 12-month finding on their 2016 petition to list all leopards as “endangered” under the Endangered Species Act.

“It is high time that the Fish and Wildlife Service acted on our petition to extend full protections to these unique and beautiful creatures,” said Teresa Telecky, vice president of Humane Society International’s wildlife programs. “Its decision is far overdue, and every day the agency does not act is another day that this species tumbles further down the path toward extinction.”

Most leopard populations in Africa are currently listed as “threatened” and are not given the law’s full range of protections. Furthermore, an endangered listing would increase transparency and give the public the ability to comment on trophy import applications. That petition also asked the agency to take immediate action to apply a stricter standard to the import of leopards as hunted trophies.

“Scientists have highlighted time and again instances where trophy hunting imperils local leopard populations, and up-listing leopards from threatened to endangered would ensure the public can weigh in on the critical analysis of whether trophy hunting could somehow enhance these cats’ survival,” said Sanerib.


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Posts: 9519 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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https://biologicaldiversity.or...trophies-2020-10-28/


Access to the 64 page lawsuit is available in the link.


Kathi

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Posts: 9519 | Location: Chicago | Registered: 23 July 2003Reply With Quote
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Morons! More leopards are dying in South Africa now that the greentards have taken away their value than where dying before the ban!
 
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I'm sure glad that Africans are telling us how to manage whitetails and elk.......


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The trouble these days is that certain people are so convinced of their correctness and virtue that they will lie and cheat without shame to achieve their ends.


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Posts: 13701 | Location: New England | Registered: 06 June 2003Reply With Quote
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Retards, Limpopo in the hunting areas is covered up in Leopards & even with every one killing the shit out of them (which they wouldn't if you could get permits to pay for all the stuff they kill/eat) the buggers are all over, even had two Cheetah appear at a blind !
 
Posts: 461 | Location: New Zealand - Australia - South Africa | Registered: 14 October 2007Reply With Quote
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Now if they can just convince all the farmers to stop running them over, shooting them by the truckload, and poisoning them, the leopard populations can come screaming back to really become a nuisance pest for everyone.

Once again, this is about the antihunting movement and not about saving a species.


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Posts: 22442 | Location: Occupying Little Minds Rent Free | Registered: 04 October 2012Reply With Quote
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Why don’t the African governments say, fine, we will stop hunting them.

But, you have to pay us all the lost revenue.

Every year.


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quote:
Originally posted by Saeed:
Why don’t the African governments say, fine, we will stop hunting them.

But, you have to pay us all the lost revenue.

Every year.


Excellent idea, need to pay for all the animals that are killed by them to from Goats,Calf's to Exotic breeding game, but then being Africa they will just kill the predators any way !

I've been to Kenya a couple of times over 30yrs apart (man that place is a disaster for Game Animals) & spent time in the Mara (friend flys Balloons) when I asked the locals about leopards eating all their Goats & Dogs, got some strange looks & told not a problem, that is because ever predator not in the middle of the park is dead, poisoned & the rest snared.

There needs to be a campaign alright, a campaign against Snares & Poison not just in Africa but world wide & of cause the huge human population that is using them to wipe the place clean !

I pull up 10s & 10s of snares each week, hate to think how many animals died horribly this year as I was not there to do that !!
 
Posts: 461 | Location: New Zealand - Australia - South Africa | Registered: 14 October 2007Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Saeed:
Why don’t the African governments say, fine, we will stop hunting them.

But, you have to pay us all the lost revenue.

Every year.


Why don't African Governments simply tell them to piss off?


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quote:
Originally posted by fairgame:
quote:
Originally posted by Saeed:
Why don’t the African governments say, fine, we will stop hunting them.

But, you have to pay us all the lost revenue.

Every year.


Why don't African Governments simply tell them to piss off?


Exactly!

Works like a charm with stupid bunny huggers.

You have been to my house, and seen the few trophies on display.

Every now and then, someone comes here and the question comes "did you shoot these?"

Normally people actually wish to know where and I am happy to tell them.

Some come up with the "why do you want to kill these beautiful animal?"

"I won't bother telling you why. You are too stupid to understand"

That normally puts an end to the argument.


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Posts: 68907 | Location: Dubai, UAE | Registered: 08 January 1998Reply With Quote
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South Africa alone is crawling with Leopards; big ones! None of these self righteous dimwits have a clue. There's big money in the animal game and they get plenty of coin from knee jerk NatGeo minions and Save the Snail wannabe's. Leopards are very secretive and rarely seen in areas where they come into contact with humans. So Skippy Skinflint thinks there are only a dozen Leopards left in all of Africa. Just read between the lines of any anti-hunting Imp and it's plain to see; they make big money off of humanizing animals. Instead of spending millions on lawsuits, why aren't they donating millions to conservation? I've yet to see them do anything worthwhile for animals.


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