Martin Meissner / AP
Trophy lions include this stuffed specimen at an international hunting exposition in Dortmund, Germany, in 2011.
By Miguel Llanos, NBC News
If wildlife activists have their way, U.S. hunters trekking to Africa soon won't be able to bring back any lion skins or skulls as trophies.
Acting on a petition by those activists, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday said it will study whether the species warrants protection under the Endangered Species Act.
Born Free USA, one of the petition groups, called the review "the necessary first step toward ensuring a chance at survival for this beleaguered species."
African lion populations have seen "a substantial decline" over the past two decades and are estimated to be around 32,000,?according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which monitors species numbers globally.?
The threats include not only trophy hunters, but loss of habitat, humans eating lion meat, and commercial sale of their body parts, said?Adam Roberts, executive vice president of?Born Free USA.?
As humans move into lion habitat, he added, that increases "retaliatory killings, including by gruesome poisoning," of lions that go after livestock.
The Fish and Wildlife Service began a 60-day period to receive public and expert comment?on whether to list the species. The Asian lion was listed as endangered in 1970.
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