Lions in the Balance: Man-Eaters, Manes, and Men with Guns by Craig Packer - review by Patrick Scrivenor

Patrick Scrivenor

Long Live the King?

Lions in the Balance: Man-Eaters, Manes, and Men with Guns

By

University of Chicago Press 346pp £24.50
 

There is more to lions than meets the eye. Given what does, this is surprising. Formidably strong, prone to violent mayhem on an expansive scale, the lion is surely equipped to look after itself. Tragically, that is not the case. Hemmed in by mankind, the African lion is in trouble, on the same fatal trajectory as the Indian tiger. In the 1940s the number of African lions was estimated at 450,000. Now it seems likely that fewer than 20,000 remain in the wild.

Professor Craig Packer is the doyen of lion biologists: he is the director of the Lion Research Center at the University of Minnesota, and back in 1978 he headed the Serengeti lion project in Tanzania. The core of this book is the plight of lions in Tanzania during Packer’s working