Visit WCN
Site Logo
  • About the LRF
    • What We Fund
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Supporters
    • Disney & the Lion Recovery Fund
    • Lionscape Coalition
    • FAQ
  • Lions & Recovery
    • Biology & Behavior
    • Distribution & Status
    • Threats to Lions
    • Road to Recovery
  • Projects
    • Project Map
    • Project Database
  • Stories
Donate
  • About the LRF
    • What We Fund
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Supporters
    • Disney & the Lion Recovery Fund
    • Lionscape Coalition
    • FAQ
  • Lions & Recovery
    • Biology & Behavior
    • Distribution & Status
    • Threats to Lions
    • Road to Recovery
  • Projects
    • Project Map
    • Project Database
  • Stories

No Longer King of the Jungle: New Fund to Aid Africas Lions

November 21, 2017

By Krista Larson

Subscribe

DAKAR, Senegal — Senegal’s Niokolo-Koba National Park is home to fewer than 50 lions after years of poaching decimated not only them but also their prey. Small patches of lion skin are sold at local fetish markets for $10, and their bones have a thriving market in Asia.

Sightings have become so rare that it once took researchers conducting a lion survey in the area two months before they spotted one of the big cats. Conservationists, however, believe the park could one day rebound.

“This landscape is still in fantastic shape,” said Philipp Henschel, West and Central Africa regional director for the lion program at Panthera, a global wild cat conservation organization. “This area could potentially, if well protected, harbor between 400 and 500 lions.”

A $150,000 grant from a fund launched this week by the Wildlife Conservation Network and The Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation is aimed at better equipping Niokolo-Koba’s park rangers for those efforts.

The Lion Recovery Fund is initially providing $800,000 toward bolstering lions’ habitat across the continent, from Senegal in the west to Tanzania in the east as well as Zambia and Malawi in southern Africa.

“Lions in Africa are facing a whole range of human threats that are increasing in scope as the human and livestock populations grow,” said Peter Lindsey, conservation initiatives director for the Wildlife Conservation Network.

 
Photography Credit: Colleen Begg
Charity Navigator
1% for the Planet

Donate

The Lion Recovery Fund maintains a 100% donation model. Every dollar raised is directly deployed to projects that recover lions, with zero administrative fees or overhead.

News & Stories

Discover

Projects

Projects

Sign-up for Our Newsletter

Managed by wcn-logo Created with Sketch.
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
Site by Briteweb
Registered 501(c)(3) EIN: 30-0108469