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10-31-01
This happened in Billings, Montana.
Lions 0 - Humans 6.2 Billion
LONDON (Reuters)
- Lions could disappear from West and Central Africa in the next decade
because their populations are fragmented and too small to survive, conservationists
said Wednesday. A new report by a group of animal experts said the largest
concentrations of lions consist of two groups of 200 lions each in Cameroon
and along the borders of Senegal, Mali and Guinea. Other populations are
as small as 50. But in order for the animals to continue to exist without
inbreeding at least 100 breeding pairs, or 500 to 1,000 animals, are needed.
"For the next century lions will not go extinct but they will be restricted
to about a dozen national parks," Hans Bauer, of Leiden University in
the Netherlands, told Reuters. He was one of a group of 30 lion experts
who met under the auspices of the World Conservation Union in June in
Cameroon to discuss the dwindling lion populations in West and Central
Africa. According to 1996 estimates by the group, there are between 30,000
and 100,000 lions throughout all of Africa but Bauer, who has worked in
Cameroon for many years, said the real numbers are probably closer to
between 10,000 and 30,000. "In all of West and Central Africa, from Senegal
to Chad, there are only 2,000 animals," Bauer said, adding that all of
the populations will not survive into the next decade. According to the
130-page report by the experts, known as the African Lion Working Group,
lions are being squeezed into smaller and smaller areas because more land
is being used for agriculture and livestock breeding. www.african-lion.org
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