Abstract

Abstract People hunt and kill animals for sport in many parts of the world. This raises many issues, some of which were brought to the fore when a lion Panthera leo, nicknamed Cecil, was killed by a trophy hunter in Zimbabwe in 2015. Cecil's death led to an unprecedented public reaction in Europe and the USA, and a debate in which opponents and supporters of sport hunting advanced different types of argument based on, inter alia, conservation, animal welfare and economics. The reaction to the Cecil event provides a perspective for scrutinizing sport hunting more widely. In this article we explore parallels between lion trophy hunting in Africa (which can involve either wild or captive‐bred lions) and shooting of common pheasant Phasianus colchicus, a sport which is largely sustained in the UK by the annual release of over 40 million captive‐bred birds. These two forms of sport hunting share common themes that are likely to be influential for the future of sport hunting more widely. These include the extent to which sport hunting maintains land for wildlife, and the impacts of intensification (e.g. the extent to which quarry are reared and released). Concern for the welfare of quarry animals is a dominant theme in debates about hunting. These themes are likely to be relevant for the conservation of many species hunted for sport. Increasing distaste for the killing of animals for sport in many countries may lead to the end of some types of sport hunting, with implications for both habitat and wildlife conservation. It would be both prudent and appropriate for conservationists to increase the urgency with which they seek alternative methods for preventing loss of biodiverse land to other uses. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Humans hunt wild animals for sport across the globe

  • In common with trophy hunting of wild lions, the economic significance of game bird shooting is closely linked to the land use protection argument and is part of the case made in its support

  • Species around the globe are hunted for sport; they include fish, reptiles, birds and mammals— quarry vary from wild boar in Europe to Houbara bustard in Arabia, to cougar and racoons in the USA, leopards and wildebeest in Africa and crocodiles and camels in Australia

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Summary

Introduction

Humans hunt wild animals for sport across the globe. Such hunting, which we define here as the pursuit and/or killing of animals primarily for recreation (as distinct from hunting primarily for pest control or subsistence1 ), raises many issues. In this article we explore parallels between lion trophy hunting in Africa (which can involve either wild or captive-bred lions) and shooting of common pheasant Phasianus colchicus, a sport which is largely sustained in the UK by the annual release of over 40 million captive-bred birds.

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