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Namibia implements strategies to sustain lion population

A lion is pictured at the Etosha National Park in northern Namibia, Aug. 15, 2022. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng) The Namibian government is taking a proactive stance to protect and sustain its dwindling lion population in the northwestern part of the country, an official said on Monday.

By Xinhua

WINDHOEK, July 4 (Xinhua) -- The Namibian government is taking a proactive stanceto protect and sustain its dwindling lion population in the northwestern part of the country, an official said on Monday.Uakendisa Muzuma, an official with the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism, told Xinhua in an interview that northwestern Namibia's lion population faces threats of human-wildlife conflict and especially drought, leading to a sharp decline in numbers."Population has likely decreased but is stable and healthy," Muzuma added. Lions are pictured at the Etosha National Park in northern Namibia, Aug. 15, 2022. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng)According
 to the Northwest Lion Population Survey conducted between November 2022
 and January 2023, the lion population in northwestern Namibia includes 
about 35 adult females, 21 adult males and 14 cubs. An additional 400 
lions in Namibia's Etosha National Park make up the lion population.
"This translates to an occupancy of 0.2 lions per square kilometer. This is extremely low density," Muzuma said.The
 ministry has since taken significant steps to conserve the lion 
population through research and monitoring. Under this system, about 70 
percent of lions are monitored through collars. "The ministry fitted 45 
satellite collars" to give lion rangers, conservancy personnel and 
activates early warning, he said.The
 ministry has also activated 347 trail motion cameras and undertaken 
five deployments, translating to 11,419 camera days and 591 lion images. A lion is pictured at the Hoanib River drainage in northern Namibia, Feb. 8, 2023. (Xinhua/Chen Cheng)Moreover,
 it implements tools such as the Spatial Monitoring and Reporting Tool, 
also known as SMART, to track wildlife in remote areas and identify new 
lions."Through
 this, we monitor wildlife at hotspots and near farms through record 
patrol and initiatives tailored to monitor the human-wildlife conflict,"
 he said, adding that the ministry also built 97 predator-proof kraals 
in partnership with the Kwando Carnivore Project."Since
 2018, human-wildlife conflict incidents have reduced by more than 33 
percent annually. Complemented by stringent law enforcement, which 
resulted in the arrest of six people for illegal lion killing," he said.The
 ministry also plans to strengthen capacity-building strategies and 
collaboration to protect the southern African nation's wildlife. "The 
government continues to invest in conservation efforts, foster 
partnerships and promote sustainable tourism practices," he added.  ■
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