To elaborate - I perfectly understand the way Africa works, and I also appreciate the input into preservation that 'trophy hunting' can deliver, even down to the basic feeding of local people and helping them raise their kids with food available, etc. I get it...I understand that many 'trophy' animals are shot as part of a plan and many are not 'biggest is best', but done in the right way for the right reasons, I get it!
However, I have also seen some of the 'trophy rooms' in large US homes, I don't want to name states, but Texas is one (a good friend has a ranch there). Some of these places are simply lined with large trophies of every imaginable african species, in their prime mostly, simply a show room. I doubt much of the business PH's generate come from the UK when you look at the footprint of US trophy hunters are,,,and I suspect, from what I've seen, a LOT of this business is about the trophy, not any sort of preservation.
after all, if it is about the experience, take some pictures, some memories, and leave the trophy/antlers behind, why bring them home? If you told me tomorrow I can continue my deer stalking, but never take a head home again, I wouldn't give two shjites, they don't matter to me, the meat, and having culled the right beast is the trophy itself.
I also recall an american hunter (from Texas too actually), who used to come to the highlands on an estate I used to stalk. He brough a stalker with him, rented the estate Argo, and came for 20 days, only wanting to shoot 'big' 10-12 pointers. After such a visit I came to the estate to find a cull stag..what I found was sickening,, a larder room heaving in all the largest stag heads from the entire 10,000 acre ground, argo tracks over every inch of the land, through peat hags, etc. all turned over..not a stag or deer in sight, not for years after..the next year I believe it was a wash out for him (obviously), and then he hasn't been back, but likely moved on to destroy another estate en lieu of USD $$$.
If trophy hunting/import of trophies is banned, it does not mean hunting abroad is banned, but it does separate those hunting for experiences and those hunting for trophies, and that, can only be a good thing.