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To date, the LRF has invested $4 million to 42 projects with 29 different organizations across 18 countries, for the benefit of lion conservation.
Today, we’re proud to announce our newest round of grantees.
Known for his dreaded locks, Hjalmar was a resident male in Tanzania's Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) for a couple years along with Kijana, a single male that immigrated into the crater. These two formed a coalition and sired cubs with the Lagunita pride.
As of today, the LRF has invested $3.2 million to 36 projects with 25 different organizations across 17 countries, for the benefit of lion conservation. These organizations confront a variety of complicated issues that affect lions across the continent, including shrinking habitats and the loss of wild prey, human-lion conflict, and the burgeoning trade in lion body parts.
Lions exude power, strength, and charisma in their every movement. Yet despite seeming to be an untouchable apex predator, lions are in danger. Over the last 25 years, their populations have declined by half across the continent—which is why this #GivingTuesday, on November 27, we urge you to join the global giving movement, and give to lions. The process is simple.
Information about lions and their distribution is critical in developing plans to protect them. Our grant to Endangered Wildlife Trust will help them establish a lion database, which will be used to assess the abundance and distribution of lions across Africa.
Despite being one of the most iconic and revered animals on the planet, African lion numbers are drastically declining. Lion populations have seen a precipitous drop from 200,000 a century ago to just over 20,000 today, signaling an unprecedented crisis for both lions and their landscapes. But there is hope.
Illegal bushmeat trade—the illegal, commercial and unsustainable trade in wildlife meat—is probably the single greatest threat to wildlife (including lions) in Zambia and surrounding countries in the Southern African region. To tackle this problem head-on, the Wildlife Crime Prevention Project—a grantee of the Lion Recovery Fund—has launched a hard-hitting public awareness campaign, This Is Not a Game, with one critical goal: to end illegal bushmeat trade.
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.
In Mozambique’s Niassa Reserve, the fate of lions is profoundly linked to the lives of the local people. That’s why the team at Niassa Lion Project (NLP) often say, “our work is as much about people as it is about lions.”