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Reading: Two Male Lions Have Been Relocated To Addo Elephant National Park
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The Bulrushes > News > Two Male Lions Have Been Relocated To Addo Elephant National Park
News

Two Male Lions Have Been Relocated To Addo Elephant National Park

Staff Writer
Staff Writer
Published: July 11, 2025
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Addo – Two male lions have been relocated to Addo Elephant National Park (AENP) in the Eastern Cape.

The two, estimated to be around seven years old, have been moved from the Twee Revieren section of Kgalagadi National Park, now called AENP, explained South African National Parks (SANParks) Spokesperson
JP Louw.

Two male lions have been acclimatising to their new conditions in a boma in AENP for the past few weeks.

“They were released yesterday, Thursday, 10 July 2025, and early indications are that they are settling well into the landscape,” JP Louw said Friday, 11 July 2025.

Their arrival follows close on the heels of the introduction of two lionesses into the park at the beginning of March this year.

The two-and-a-half-year-old sisters were brought in from the !Khamab Kalahari Reserve on the south-eastern edge of the Kalahari.

“The new sets of genes are a valuable addition to the lion population in the Park, as they bring with them strong, healthy genes that will add to the genetic variety in the Park,” explained JP Louw.

“There are now nine lions in the main game viewing area and a further three in what is known as the Nyathi section of Addo.”

The SANParks spokesperson said the two males are collared for ease of monitoring and so that the rangers and researchers can observe what habitats they use, their proximity to the other lions, other predators, and which species they prey on.

“The collars will also enable management to reach a fine balance of managing the lion population carefully in relation to the size of the Park and their impact on prey species,” JP Louw said.

“Their management forms part of a larger initiative to mimic natural processes that regulate lion social behaviour and population growth, which includes swapping individuals between parks to ensure constant introduction of new genes.

“At the same time, two older males, known as Niklaas and Witwarm, were darted and moved to Mountain Zebra National Park outside Cradock.”

The two are first settling in a boma inside the park before being released.

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