The man was heard screaming for help as he was attacked by the lions. Photo / 123RF
A big cat poacher has been killed and eaten by the pride of lions he was hunting at a private game reserve in South Africa.
The hunter was heard screaming for help as he was attacked at the Ingwelala Private Nature Reserve in Hoedspruit outside Phalaborwa, the Daily Mail reported.
But the lions quickly killed their victim and devoured most of his body before being chased off, leaving his head untouched.
Police at first thought the dead man was a tractor driver who worked at the game reserve.
But when he turned up alive, they realised he may have been a poacher. A hunting rifle was found close to what was left of the blood-drenched body.
Police in Limpopo have called in the Department of Home Affairs to help them to try to identify the dead man, who was not carrying documents.
Police Lieutenant-Colonel Moatshe Ngoepe said: "The process of identifying this body has already commenced and it might be made easier as his head was among the remains found at the scene."
The owner of the reserve, who identified himself as Josh, said he was told not to speak to the media because the police investigation was still under way.
A worker from a nearby nature reserve, described the area as lion territory and added: "The head was still there but the lions had eaten most of the rest.
"A scream was heard and the lions were scattered by the sound of gunshots but it was too late to do anything for him. He was eaten."
Ngoepe confirmed police were investigating the possibility the dead man might have been a poacher after a hunting rifle was found near the scene.
Lions kill up to 250 people a year in Africa. A male weighs 190kg and a female 130kg and they can ran at more than 80km/h. There are fewer than 20,000 lions left in the wild in Africa.
Their bones have become highly prized in the the Far East, where a skeleton can fetch up to £7000 ($13,400) and the skin £3000 ($5700). Teeth can fetch £500 ($950) each.
British wildlife photographer Charlie Lynham, 59, from Liverpool who now lives close to the reserve, has spent years photographing the lion pride that lives there.
He arrived at the gates shortly after the alarm was raised and the paramedics had raced in.
Lynham was told that the suspected poacher had been killed - but he added that it was not yet clear whether the attack had happened inside Ingwelala or in a neighbouring reserve.
"It turns out it was not the resident pride that lives here responsible as they were on a buffalo kill at the time but a pride perhaps come over from the Kruger [National Park]," he said.
"It happened on the border of the Umbabat Game Reserve after dark and may have been on their reserve.
"Two .456 big game rifles and ammunition were found at the scene and that is the weapon of choice used by those hunting big game - especially elephant and rhino in the bush.
"I cannot say if it was poachers as the matter is under investigation but that is their weapon of choice and they usually work in groups of three and work under cover of darkness."
He said as well as the half-eaten remains, two sets of footprints have been found running away. Lynham said there were no anti-poaching groups were in the area at the time and nobody was working in the area.
But he added that, despite being speculation "it would seem very possible that you have poetic justice here".
"Lions are not a particular danger in daylight but after dark, then that is another matter.
"It is purely speculation on my part but it would seem they either walked into a pride of lions in the darkness or they were stalked and attacked and a man was taken down and eaten.
"The other two, it seems, ran off and two .456 big game rifles were found and ammunition."
He said he had been photographing the Ingwelala pride for years and was "concerned in case it was them, in case they got accused of attacking humans and there were calls to kill them".
"But it was not our pride and was probably one from the Kruger that come over the border," he said.
"If you go out walking in the bush in the dark then I am afraid you are fair game in the wild and there is no way that anyone can attribute any blame to those lions for this kill."
The death comes just months after poacher Luteni Muhararukua was killed by a rhino he was hunting for its horn in nearby Namibia.