Fake leopard pelts bid to save big cats

DURBAN, South Africa — Many attending a religious gathering in South Africa this weekend were wearing leopard skins, seen as symbols of status and power. But some of the pelts were fake, reflecting an effort by an international conservation group to reduce poaching of the threatened animals.

The Shembe church of southern Africa, which mixes Christian and traditional Zulu beliefs, was expected to draw thousands of people today near the city of Durban. Followers made the trip from across South Africa, as well as neighboring Zimbabwe and Mozambique.

The Panthera conservation group says it has donated more than 14,000 fake leopard skins to Shembe followers and that another 4,000 will be distributed. Demand for real leopard pelts in the Shembe community in South Africa has dropped by 50 percent because of the campaign, according to the group, which launched its Furs for Life project in 2013.

Africa’s leopard population has dropped because of habitat loss, the loss of prey killed by poachers for meat, illegal hunting of leopards for their skins and attacks by people who want to protect their livestock.

While there is limited data on leopard numbers across the continent, one study estimates that the population in sub-Saharan Africa has dropped more than 30 percent over the past two decades. Leopards are listed as vulnerable on an international “red list” of threatened species.

Southern Africa is considered a relative stronghold for leopards compared with other parts of Africa, though the group says fewer than 5,000 leopards remain in South Africa.

Concerned about threats to the leopard population, South Africa in January 2016 banned the regulated “trophy” hunting of leopards.

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