Warning: The images in this post could be distressing for some readers.
When pictures of 19-year-old hunter Kendall Jones went viral earlier this week, many were horrified.
The photos showed the smiling, sunny Texan cheerleader next to the animals she had shot and killed. White lions. Rhinoceroses. Zebras.
But as more details of her hunting habits were revealed, what many found just as shocking were the circumstances under which the animals had lost their lives.
Jones claimed she was killing the animals as part of a “conservation” effort.
“Controlling the male lion population is important within large fenced areas like these in order to make sure the cubs have a high survival rate,” Jones wrote on her Facebook page.
“Funds from a hunt like this goes partially to the government for permits but also to the farm owner as an incentive to keep and raise lions on their property. […] Now to the leopard, this was a free ranging leopard in Zimbabwe on communal land. The money for the permit goes to the communal council and to their village people.”
Kendall was reportedly taking part in what is known as “canned hunting”.
If you’re wondering what “canned hunting” is – think battery hens but with big cats and you’ll have the basic idea.
It is a legalised practice where lions (and some other large animals) are removed from the wild or bred in captivity, and kept in conservation parks and breeding programs. They are brought up among humans. They are bottle fed, and petted by children and tourists.