| Swahili Name: Simba
The lion is a magnificent animal
that appears as a symbol of power, courage and
nobility on family crests, coats of arms and national
flags in many civilizations. Lions at one time
were found from Greece through the Middle East
to northern India, but today only a very small
population remains in India. In the past lions
lived in most parts of Africa, but are now confined
to the sub-Saharan region.
Most cat species live a fundamentally
solitary existence, but the lion is an exception.
It has developed a social system based on teamwork
and a division of labor within the pride, and
an extended but closed family unit centered around
a group of related females. The average pride
consists of about 15 individuals, including five
to 10 females with their young and two or three
territorial males that are usually brothers or
pride mates.
Generally a tawny yellow, lions,
like other species, tend to be lighter in color
in hot, arid areas and darker in areas of dense
vegetation. Mature male lions are unique among
the cat species for the thick mane of brown or
black hair that encircles the head and neck. The
tails of lions end in a horny spine covered with
a tuft of hair.
Lions are found in savannas,
grasslands, dense bush and woodlands.
Females do 85 to 90 percent of
the pride's hunting, while the males patrol the
territory and protect the pride, for which they
take the "lion's share" of the females'
prey. When resting, lions seem to enjoy good fellowship
with lots of touching, head rubbing, licking and
purring. But when it comes to food, each lion
looks out for itself. Squabbling and fighting
are common, with adult males usually eating first,
followed by the females and then the cubs.
Lions are the laziest of the
big cats. They usually spend 16 to 20 hours a
day sleeping and resting, devoting the remaining
hours to hunting, courting or protecting their
territory. They keep in contact with one another
by roaring loud enough to be heard up to five
miles away. The pride usually remains intact until
the males are challenged and successfully driven
away or killed by other males, who then take over.
Not all lions live in prides. At maturity, young
males leave the units of their birth and spend
several years as nomads before they become strong
enough to take over a pride of their own. Some
never stop wandering and continue to follow migrating
herds; but the nomadic life is much more difficult,
with little time for resting or reproducing.
Within the pride, the territorial
males are the fathers of all the cubs. When a
lioness is in heat, a male will join her, staying
with her constantly. The pair usually mates for
less than a minute, but it does so about every
15 to 30 minutes over a period of four to five
days.
Lions may hunt at any hour, but
they typically go after large prey at night. They
hunt together to increase their success rate,
since prey can be difficult to catch and can outrun
a single lion. The lions fan out along a broad
front or semicircle to creep up on prey. Once
with within striking distance, they bound in among
the startled animals, knock one down and kill
it with a bite to the neck or throat. Hunts are
successful about half the time.
Cooperative hunting enables lions
to take prey as large as wildebeests, zebras,
buffaloes, young elephants, rhinos, hippos and
giraffes, any of which can provide several meals
for the pride. Mice, lizards, tortoises, warthogs,
antelopes and even crocodiles also form part of
a lion's diet. Because they often take over kills
made by hyenas, cheetahs and leopards, scavenged
food provides more than 50 percent of their diets
in areas like the Serengeti plains.
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