Namibia’s wildlife cull during worst drought in 100 years strikes a good balance

Chris Brown and Gail Thomson.

AN estimated 1.4 million people in Namibia, nearly half of the national population, are considered to be in a food crisis.
By October, the situation will be even worse. Unless rains come early this year, many people will face starvation.

The Namibian government recently announced plans to cull 640 animals from five national parks, plus 83 elephants outside park boundaries where they come into contact with people. These plans have been met with confusion from those with little knowledge of Namibia, and outrage from some within Namibia who are generally hostile to the country’s wildlife policies.

Once you see the big picture, you will understand why the Namibian Chamber of Environment does not oppose the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism’s plan.

Instead, the chamber opposes the spreading of misinformation on this topic in the international media.

Severe drought and human needs

The 2023/24 rainfall season was exceptionally poor, triggering Namibia’s worst drought in 100 years. Most crops in the north-eastern parts of the country have failed entirely, creating severe food insecurity in those regions.

The more livestock-reliant communities in the drier western parts of the country are slightly more resilient to drought than crop farmers, but this terrible season comes on the heels of many other droughts (e.g. 2022/23, 2020/21, 2019/20 and 2018/19) from which this area has yet to recover.

The consequences of poor rains in the early parts of the year only start to show later in the year once the dry season wears on.

An estimated 1.4 million people in Namibia are considered to be in a state of food crisis, according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification report.

By October, the situation will be even worse.

Critics have downplayed the drought and choose to rather focus on November’s national elections as the reason for the cull.

All government decisions are ultimately political, but the idea that Swapo is exaggerating the impact of a 100-year record drought in time for the elections is far-fetched, to say the least.

Indeed, the political situation in Namibia would be more comfortable for Swapo if these were times of plenty and economic prosperity.

Normal wildlife management practices in Namibia

Namibia’s wildlife population extends far beyond its national parks to include areas on communal lands, private wildlife reserves, hunting ranches and mixed livestock and wildlife farmlands.

Most of the national parks in Namibia are fenced, in whole or part, while all of the private reserves and ranches are fenced to keep wildlife on those properties. While fences are useful for reducing conflict with livestock-farming neighbours and reducing poaching, they prevent wildlife migration, which is particularly problematic during times of drought.

Natural population growth within fenced areas needs to be controlled, which all freehold farmers do annually, selling about 15% of their antelope to meat hunters.

During drought years, the vegetation cannot sustain the normal population of grazing and browsing wildlife. If this fenced system were left to nature, many animals would die of starvation after causing extensive damage to the natural vegetation, which would then be slow to recover.

Ecological grounds

On purely ecological grounds, wildlife managers respond to drought by increasing the offtake rates to either keep the population growth at zero or reduce it (natural reproduction rates vary from 20-30%) depending on the state of the vegetation. This strategy reduces the impact on vegetation during the drought year and allows for quick recoveries if the next year’s rainy season is better.

While culling is necessary, many farmers advertise ‘cull hunts’ on their properties that offer clients the chance to hunt some of these animals, thus generating income besides meat. This kind of hunting is to be distinguished from trophy hunting, which aims to take a small number of male animals that are old enough to have bred several times. Trophy hunts are more expensive than cull hunts and are designed to have minimal or no impact on population growth.

Larger areas of land that have fewer fences and more predators do not require the same level of annual offtakes that the smaller freehold properties do.

National parks the size of Etosha, for example, allow for some migration within the park, while lions and other predators will kill more prey species during a drought year as they get weaker.

Nonetheless, the smaller national parks, particularly in the north-eastern parts of the country, have to be managed more intensively than Etosha and other large parks. Hunting concession areas already exist in several parks, which serve the dual purpose of managing wildlife populations and providing income and meat to neighbouring communities and the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism.

Communal conservancies are unfenced, which allows many wildlife species to move through them between national parks. In these cases, wildlife management needs to take into account other land uses (mainly livestock and crop farming) and the needs of the people who established each conservancy.

Regular hunting quotas

The impetus for creating communal conservancies in the first place was to allow people living on communal land to use their wildlife in similar ways to the freehold farmers in other parts of the country.

Consequently, regular hunting quotas are set in conservancies based on wildlife monitoring data.

The overall wildlife population in Namibia is between 2.5 million and three million animals, 80% of which are on fenced freehold farms.

This means that each year in Namibia, 300 000 to 360 000 wild animals are killed for their meat, with more being taken off during drought years as part of normal ecological management practices.

These numbers put the culling of 640 game animals (excluding elephants) by the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism into perspective. None of these will be trophy hunted, since the aim of the operation is to supply meat to local communities and reduce local wildlife populations for ecological reasons.

Hippos are especially affected by severe drought, as pools of standing water are critical for their survival. When these pools dry up, hippos either move to other pools, kill each other in increasingly desperate territorial fights, or die when they get stuck in the sun-baked mud. Culling is a merciful option for hippos during an extreme drought.

Hunting wild animals for the purposes of ecological management and generating meat, income, and wider benefits is, therefore, part of Namibia’s long-term conservation and wildlife management strategy.

It is embedded in many of the nation’s policies, which take their cue from the Constitution that expressly supports the sustainable use of natural resources for the benefit of all Namibians.

What about the elephants?

The plans for elephant hunting are explained separately to the plans for culling other wildlife, as per the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism press release.

It is clear that the elephants selected for this cull will be from areas outside the national parks on either communal or freehold land. In terms of numbers, taking 83 elephants from a national population of 24 000 is certainly sustainable.

The areas mentioned in the press release include places that were previously marked as human-elephant conflict hotspots in the environment ministry’s ‘An Overview of Elephant Conservation and Management in Namibia’ that accompanied the National Elephant Conservation and Management Plan 2021/2022-2030/2031.

Four of these hotspots were source populations for the Namibian elephant auction, which aimed to reduce these populations through live capture and sale.

Only 37 of the 170 auctioned elephants were captured and sold from only two of the four conflict hotspots. The cull is, therefore, a continuation of the ministry’s commitment to reducing elephant populations in these and other hotspot areas.

Elephant hunting (and eating) is not unusual in Namibia, particularly in communal conservancies.

The only difference related to this drought is that the quota for elephants was increased in certain conservancies and were given to farmers on freehold land that have formed their own elephant management committees.

Concerns have been raised that some of the 83 elephants will be taken from the small sub-population occurring in the far western hyper-arid parts of the country.

These ‘desert adapted’ elephants are not genetically distinct from normal elephants, but their knowledge of this arid environment is essential for their survival. These populations also grow extremely slowly due to the sub-optimal conditions for raising calves.

For these reasons, and because they are more valuable for their ecological services and to support tourism, the Namibian Chamber of Environment believes they should be given a high level of protection.

We understand that none of these elephants are earmarked for culling.

In areas that come close to the desert environment (five from Omatjete and four from Kalkfeld) the environment ministry will work with the Elephant Human Relations Aid to avoid culling elephants that are part of their long-term monitoring project.

Besides the meat, any income generated from elephant hunts will go to the relevant conservancy or elephant management committee (consisting of local freehold farmers) as an incentive to continue living with elephants on their land. Hunting outfitters will be able to advertise these hunts to potential clients, with non-trophy hunts provided at a lower cost than trophy hunts.

We understand that only eight of the 83 elephants are trophy hunts. None of the income from either kind of hunt will go to government coffers.

Misinformation

Several pieces of misinformation have been shared with the press, including an article in Daily Maverick.

First, a table of wildlife numbers counted in the north-western communal conservancy areas is displayed to presumably show that there are not enough animals for the proposed cull. Three species are highlighted in the table because of their recent declines: gemsbok, kudu and springbok.

That none of these species are even mentioned in the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism press release, and that no antelope species will be culled in this area, is ignored.

Second, it is claimed that one reason the ministry gives for the cull is competition between the game to be culled inside national parks and livestock outside national parks.

As explained above, and is clear from the ministry’s press release, the issue is a lack of grazing and water inside parks (generally in the absence of livestock), and human-elephant conflict outside parks over scarce water resources. Livestock is never mentioned in the press release.

Third, it has been suggested that this cull is creating a precedent that will be followed by carte blanche animal killing in Namibia and among its neighbours. This ignores the fact that Namibia’s Constitution, policies and practice have involved the sustainable use of wildlife throughout the country for many decades.

Most of Namibia’s neighbours already allow hunting and some have suggested elephant culls in the past, so it is difficult to see how this decision will change policies in those countries.

Fourth, it has been claimed that tourists will boycott Namibia because of this cull.

The only people who are damaging Namibia’s tourism industry are those who are trying to manufacture international outrage over the audacity of an African country daring to help itself in a time of crisis rather than waiting for handouts from developed countries.

African leaders are being treated like children who need permission from their former colonisers before they can use their own resources. Such an attitude belongs in the dustbin of history.

Finally, it is claimed by animal rights activist Izak Smit that the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism is acting on instructions from the American hunting association, Safari Club International.

The evidence for this claim is that Safari Club International attended the African Wildlife Consultative Forum in October 2023, hosted by the ministry – a meeting that Smit did not attend. The meeting was held before the 2023/24 rainy season had even begun, so it is difficult to imagine that they discussed a cull in national parks because of a future drought.

The environment ministry does not require instructions from hunting associations to make decisions about wildlife in the national parks that are entrusted to it. – Daily Maverick.

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