What better reason is there than this for some of the European stock to be sent back to populate new states in India, while new blood coming into the programme is negotiated? Why hold so many related lions at great cost in european zoos when there is demand for them in reserves back in their country of origin?
Hadley,
It may well be a possibility, be it a long shot for now. It is mighty challenging to reintroduce captive-bred carnivores. I am not saying it can not be done (what is favoured in some ecologists' circles), but it is definitely a trying endeavour to get into. Candidates must be newly weaned cubs and not a day older. They must be challenged to stalk small prey, then onto larger animals and finally on free-ranging wild animals in large enclosed habitat. And that is just a prerelease phase they would have to go through (look at the South China tiger programme for details on this).
But do not forget the current sit with the Asian lions in Sasan Gir. There are now well over 350 inside the 1400 km2 protected area surrounded by human settlements on all sides. The habitat is fine, yet the population is well beyond capacity. It is not exactly that there are too few lions, they do not have the freedom to roam. And human encroachment is leading to a spite of poaching that is taking a toll on the lion population.
Sadly, both Gujarat State government and Forest Department are literally sitting on top of the lions and are reluctant to let the lions go elsewhere, particularly inter-State. Nor are they at present even acknowledging the dangers of increased poaching, man-induced electrocution of lions, illegal deforestation, poisoning of water wells (which has only started in the last 1-2 years) in much the same fashion as India's federal States have been reluctant to acknowledge the demise of all major tiger populations - even in India's protected areas - and the consequent deconstruction of the Project Tiger myth (only India's dedicated wildlife tracking ecologists' have brought this out to the international media).
Federal authorities and the Wildlife Institute of India have both supported a relocation of Asian lions to set up a sattelite population in Madhya Pradesh. The Palpar Kuno project has been run by the Samrakshan Trust and envisages to release wild Asian lions into a protected area which has seen a resurgence in prey species (following several years of good protection and relocation of villages outside the reserve). This reserve has been chosen based upon careful ecological baseline surveys to select the best site for such an exercise. Finally, both IUCN, their Reintroduction Specialist Group chapter for Western Asia and the WWF have given the project their formal approval.
Now the recommendation for Asian lions from Sasan Gir to Palpar Kuno has been out for several years now and the Gujarat State government continues to block the WTI conservation programme for a satellite lion population. Their latest act has been to propose the extension of Sasan Gir to several areas near to Gir in Gujarat. But sound research is lacking and it can only be best qualified as a political diversion.
What I find really shameful in this whole episode how politics have hijacked a species for politics to the effect that Asian lions are actually becoming more endangered by the non-interventionist and lacklustre attitude of a State government.
The Palpar Kuno project is now contemplating taking some lions from the pure-bred stock in Indian zoos to start the re-introduction effort anyway.
Now, if any of you boys and girls would have a vote on this ... what would be your opinion?