Lion The King of Animals.
Lions have captured our imagination
for centuries. Stars of movies and characters in books, lions are at the top of
the food chain The Swahili word for lion, Simba,
also means "king," "strong," and "aggressive."
The word lion has similar meaning in our vocabulary. If you call some one
lion hearted, you’re describing a courageous and brave person. If you lionize
someone, you treat that person with great interest or importance.
Prime habitat for lions is open
woodlands, thick grassland, and brush habitat where there is enough cover for
hunting and denning. These areas of grassland habitat also provide food for the
animals lions prey upon.
Class: Mammalia (Mammals)
Order: Carnivora.
Family: Felidae
Genus: Panthera
Species: leo
Life span:
15 years in the wild, up to 30 in
zoos.
Gestation:
Almost 4 months
Age of maturity:
3 to 4 years
Size:
Females are 4.6 to 5.7 feet (1.4 to
1.7 meters) long; males are 5.6 to 8.3 feet (1.7 to 2.5 meters) long
Tail length:
27 to 41 inches (70 to 105
centimeters)
Weight:
About, Females are 270 to 400 pounds (122
to 180 kilograms): males are 330 to 570 pounds (150 to 260 kilograms)
Size at birth:
3 pounds (1.5 kilo grams)
Found in
Africa and Asia
Habitat:
Grassy plains, savannas, open
woodlands, and scrubland,
Genus of lion
Lions differ from the other members
of the large cat genus, Panthera—tigers, leopards, and jaguars. Adult male lions are much larger
than females and usually have an impressive mane of hair around the neck. The
color, size, and abundance of the mane all vary among individuals and with age.
The mane’s function is to make the male look more impressive to females and
more intimidating to rival males. The lion’s thick mane also protects his neck
against raking claws during fights with other males over territory disputes or
breeding rights.
Belong to a social group (prides)
Lions are also the only cats that
live in large, social groups called “prides.” A pride can have 3 to 30 lions
and is made up of lionesses (mothers, sisters, and cousins), and their cubs,
along with a few unrelated adult males. The pride has a close bond and is not
likely to accept a stranger. The unrelated males stay a few months or a few
years, but the older lionesses stay together for life. In dry areas with less
food, prides are smaller, with two lionesses in charge. In habitats with more food
and water, prides can have four to six adult lionesses. Both males and females
scent mark to define their territory.
Hunting in group.
Living in a pride makes life easier.
Hunting as a group means there is a better chance that the lions have food when
they need it, and it is less likely that they will get injured while hunting.
Lion researchers have noticed that some activities are “contagious” within a
pride. If one lion yawns, grooms itself, or roars, it sets off a wave of
yawning, grooming, or roaring!
Life style.
Lions and lionesses play different
roles in the life of the pride. The lionesses work together to hunt and help
rear the cubs. This allows them to get the most from their hard work, keeping
them healthier and safer. Being smaller and lighter than males, lionesses are
more agile and faster. During hunting, smaller females chase the prey toward
the center of the hunting group. The larger and heavier lionesses ambush or capture the prey. Lionesses are
versatile and can switch hunting jobs depending on which females are hunting
that day and what kind of prey it is.
Male's role
While it may look like the lionesses
do all the work in the pride, the males play an important role. While they do
eat more than the lionesses and bring in far less food (they hunt less than 10
percent of the time), males patrol, mark, and guard the pride’s territory.
Males also guard the cubs while the lionesses are hunting, and they make sure
the cubs get enough food. When a new male tries to join a pride, he has to
fight the males already there. The new male is either driven off or succeeds in
pushing out the existing males.
A lion’s life is filled with sleeping, napping, and resting. Over the course of 24 hours, lions have short
bursts of intense activity, followed by long bouts of lying around that total
up to 21 hours! Lions are good climbers and often rest in trees, perhaps to
catch a cool breeze or to get away from flies. Researchers have often noticed
lions lying around in crazy poses, such as on their backs with their feet in
the air or legs spread wide apart!
Communication.
Lions are famous for their sonorous
roar. Males are able to roar when they are about one year old, and females can
roar a few months later. Lions use their roar as one form of communication. It
identifies individuals, strengthens the pride’s bond, and lets other animals
know of the pride’s domain. Other sounds lions produce include growls, snarls,
hisses, meows, grunts, and puffs, which sound like a stifled sneeze and is used
in friendly situations.
Lions have other forms of
communication as well, mostly used to mark territory. They spread their scent
by rubbing their muzzle on tufts of grass or shrubs, and they rake the earth
with their hind paws, as the paws have scent glands, too. Adult males also
spray urine—stand back!
Dusk and dawn
Lions usually hunt at night,
particularly at dusk and dawn, with lionesses doing most of the work. A lion
chasing down prey can run the length of a football field in six seconds. Their
eyes have a horizontal streak of nerve cells, which improves their vision
following prey across a plain. Lions have been spotted taking down animals as
large as buffalo and giraffes! They may even drag this heavy prey into thickets
of brush to keep other animals from getting to it.
Lions hunt antelope and other hoofed
animals, baby elephants or rhinos, rodents, reptiles, insects, and even
crocodiles. They also scavenge or steal prey from leopards, cheetahs, hyenas,
or wild dogs, even eating food that has spoiled. Lions digest their food
quickly, which allows them to return soon for a second helping after gorging
themselves the first time.
At the San Diego Zoo and the San
Diego Zoo Safari Park, the lions get lean ground meat made for zoo carnivores
as well as an occasional large bone, thawed rabbit, or sheep carcass.
Cubs of lion.
A lioness gives birth to her cubs in
a secluded location away from the pride. At birth, each cub’s coat is yellowish
brown and marked with distinct dark, rosette-shaped spots or, sometimes,
stripes. Cubs remain hidden for four to six weeks as they gain strength, learn
to walk, and play with one another and their mother. When they return to the
pride, they can nurse from any adult lioness in the pride, not just their own mother.
In fact, the females in a pride often give birth around the same time, which
makes for lots of playmates!
Cubs born in a pride are twice as
likely to survive as those born to a lioness that is on her own. However, if a
new adult male takes over the pride, he may kill cubs under one year old so
that he can father new ones. Under favorable conditions, a lioness can produce
cubs roughly every other year.
From the time they are born, cubs
have a lot to learn! At three months old, cubs are able to follow their mother
wherever she goes, and they are weaned by the age of six months. At about one
year old, males start to get fuzz around their neck that grows into the long
mane adult male lions are famous for.
How long a lion cub stays with Mom
depends on the sex of the cub. Mothers generally raise males until they are
just about two. Once they hit that stage in life, the mother usually runs them
out of the group, and they are on their own. Sometimes the sub-adult males form
bachelor groups and run together until they are big enough to start challenging
older males in an attempt to take over a pride. If the cubs are female, Mom
cares for them until about two years of age and they usually stay with the
pride they were born into. A mother and daughter may live together for life.
Territory of Lion
Lions that do not live in prides are
called nomads, and they range far and wide while following migrating herds of
large game. Nomads are generally young males, roaming in pairs or small groups
and often related to one another. Females are occasionally nomadic, too. For reason not clearly understood, young females are sometimes driven from
their pride just as are young males. As they gain in age and experience,
nomadic males may challenge established pride males for dominance of a given territory and its pride of lionesses, or they may join nomadic
females and form a new pride.
By: Syed Muhammad Tehseen Abidi
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