South Africa announced it will end its 1995 suspension of elephant
culling to manage its burgeoning elephant populations. Since the 1995
suspension, the elephant population in Kruger National Park has grown
from 8,000 to an estimated 12,500, and is said to be hurting the parks
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In response to the announcement, AWF strongly believes that combining
parks, private lands and community areas into large conservation and
tourism landscapes is the best way to manage elephant populations and
other wildlife. Specifically, in southern Africa, AWF has pursued a
strategy of supporting full implementation of the larger Great Limpopo
Transfrontier Park, which would allow elephants and other wildlife to
spread out into the parts of Mozambique and Zimbabwe adjoining South
Africa.
Experts agree that culling is heartbreaking, dangerous, and very
expensive, and it is only considered regretfully as a last option when
the long term well-being of elephants and other wildlife is at risk.
The South African announcement of February 25 stated that culling would
be allowed only as a tool of last resort. AWF believes that in this
instance, the South African local wildlife authorities are in the best
position to determine when and where the highly undesirable option of
culling must be resorted to.
