PIC OF LION |
Lion, one of the largest members
of the cat family. The lion's size and strength have captured human imagination
since ancient times, giving these animals the nickname king of beasts. Lions
are also known for their mighty roar, a fearsome sound that can be heard by
humans more than 8 km away.
Lions once ranged over
vast areas on many...
continents. Fossil evidence shows that until about 10,000
years ago, lions lived throughout Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and into
Asia as far as southern India and the island of Sri Lanka. They also lived in
North America and northern South America. Since then, however, the lion's range
has been shrinking steadily. Human hunters have killed countless numbers of
lions as well as the hoofed mammals that lions eat. In many places, people have
taken over the lion's habitats, which often are good places to farm and raise
cattle. These habitats include grassy plains, savannas, and dry woodlands but
never thick forests or jungle. Today, lions are found in the wild in only two
places on earth. About 100,000 lions survive in Africa south of the Sahara
Desert. Another 300 lions, called Asian lions, live in a reserve called the Gīr
National Park and Lion Sanctuary in northwest India. In both places, lions
continue to be threatened by human activities. Thousands of lions also live in
zoos and circuses around the world.
Lions rival tigers for the title of
biggest cat. In fact, lions and tigers are so similar in their physical
features that without their distinctively colored fur, even scientists have
trouble telling them apart. Male lions weigh between 150 and 250 kg (330 and
550 lb) and stand about 123 cm (about 48 in) tall at the shoulder. They measure
up to 250 cm (98 in) in length, not including the tail, which measures an
additional 90 to 105 cm (35 to 41 in). Female lions are smaller, weighing
between 120 and 182 kg (265 and 400 lb). They stand about 107 cm (about 42 in)
tall and measure less than 175 cm (less than 69 in) in length, with a slightly
shorter tail.
Lions have massive shoulders and
strong forelimbs, long, sharp claws, and short, powerful jaws. As carnivores,
feeding entirely on the flesh of other mammals, lions have 30 teeth, including
large piercing canines to grab and kill prey, scissorlike molars to slice into
flesh, and small incisors to scrape meat from bones.
Adult lions have fur that
varies in color from light tan to reddish brown. The tufted tail is tipped in
darker fur. Only male lions grow a mane around the shoulders, which grows
darker and fuller as the animal ages. Cubs are born with thickly spotted fur,
which helps them hide from predators in brush and clumps of vegetation. The
spots gradually fade as the cubs grow up, sometimes remaining on the legs and
belly until the lion reaches adulthood.
African lions and Asian lions differ
slightly in appearance. Asian lions have a flap of skin on the abdomen, called
a belly fold, not found in African lions. Male African lions have fuller manes
than Asian lions do, and the shape of their skulls differs slightly.
Despite their immense strength, lions do
not have an easy life in the wild. They suffer from parasites and disease, they
get injured or even killed while hunting or fighting with each other, and they
may starve when food is scarce. About two-thirds of all cubs die before they
are 1 year old. Adult males are usually old and battered by age 10, if they
survive that long, and they rarely live longer than 12 years. Females may live
longer, up to 16 years, and some are still breeding at 15. In zoos, where they
receive veterinary care and plenty of food—and are not allowed to fight—lions
can live as long as 25 years.
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