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Trophy hunting—the killing of big game for a set of horns or tusks, a skin, or a taxidermied body—has burgeoned into a billion-dollar, profit-driven industry, overseen in some cases by corrupt ...
Trophy hunting has been identified as the least economically profitable form of land use, yet massive areas are set aside by African governments to employ a minimal number of people.
Trophy hunting is legal and supported by some scientists as a vital asset in wildlife conservation. But a former top U.S. official is raising questions over America’s ability to vet trophy ...
Primate trophy hunting has a long history in the United States. President Theodore Roosevelt in 1909 killed at least three baboons on a single safari when he famously shot nearly 300 African ...
The motivations behind trophy hunting are more personal and idiosyncratic than mere bragging rights — even chill, story-based games like Life is Strange offer a robust suite of trophies to claim.
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