The
Lion (
Panthera leo) is one of four
big cats in the
genus
Panthera, and a member of the
family
Felidae. With some males exceeding
250 kg (550
lb) in weight, it
is the second-largest living cat after the
tiger.
Wild lions currently exist in Sub-Saharan Africa and in Asia with a critically endangered remnant
population in northwest India
, having
disappeared from North Africa, the
Middle East, and Western Asia in historic times. Until
the late
Pleistocene, which was about
10,000 years ago, the lion was the most widespread large land
mammal after humans.
They were found in most of Africa, much of
Eurasia from western Europe to India, and in the Americas from the
Yukon
to Peru
.
Lions live for around 10–14 years in the wild, while in captivity
they can live over 20 years. In the wild, males seldom live longer
than ten years, as injuries sustained from continuous fighting with
rival males greatly reduces their longevity. They typically inhabit
savanna and
grassland, although they may take to bush and
forest. Lions are unusually
social compared to other cats. A pride of
lions consists of related females and offspring and a small number
of adult males. Groups of female lions typically hunt together,
preying mostly on large
ungulates. Lions
are
apex and
keystone predators, although they
will scavenge if the opportunity arises. While lions do not
typically hunt humans selectively, some have been known to become
man-eaters and seek human prey.
The lion is a
vulnerable species,
having seen a possibly irreversible population decline of 30 to 50
percent over the past two decades in its African range. Lion
populations are untenable outside of designated reserves and
national parks. Although the cause of the decline is not fully
understood, habitat loss and conflicts with humans are currently
the greatest causes of concern. Lions have been kept in
menageries since
Roman
times and have been a key species sought for exhibition in
zoos the world over since the late eighteenth
century. Zoos are cooperating worldwide in breeding programs for
the endangered
Asiatic
subspecies.
Visually, the male lion is highly distinctive and is easily
recognized by its
mane. The lion, particularly
the face of the male, is one of the most widely recognized animal
symbols in human
culture.
Depictions have
existed from the Upper Paleolithic
period, with carvings and paintings from the Lascaux
and Chauvet Caves
, through virtually all ancient and medieval
cultures where they historically occurred. It has been
extensively depicted in literature, in
sculptures, in
paintings,
on national
flags, and in contemporary
films and
literature.
Etymology
The lion's name, similar in many Romance languages, derives from
the
Latin ; cf. the
Ancient Greek ( ). The
Hebrew word ( ) may also be related, as well
as the
Ancient Egyptian
rw. It was one of the many species originally described,
as
Felis leo, by
Linnaeus in
his eighteenth century work,
Systema Naturae. The generic component
of its scientific designation,
Panthera leo, often is
presumed to derive from Greek
pan- ("all") and
ther ("beast"), but this may be a
folk etymology. Although it came into English
through the classical languages,
panthera is probably of
East Asian origin, meaning "the yellowish
animal," or "whitish-yellow".
Taxonomy and evolution
The oldest lion-like
fossil is known from
Laetoli in
Tanzania
and is perhaps 3.5 million years old; some scientists have
identified the material as
Panthera leo. These records are
not well-substantiated, and all that can be said is that they
pertain to a
Panthera-like felid. The oldest confirmed
records of
Panthera leo in
Africa
are about 2 million years younger.The closest relatives of the
lion are the other
Panthera
species: the
tiger, the
jaguar, and the
leopard.
Morphological and genetic studies reveal that the tiger was the
first of these recent species to diverge. About 1.9 million
years ago the jaguar branched off the remaining group, which
contained ancestors of the
leopard and lion.
The lion and leopard subsequently separated about 1 to
1.25 million years ago from each other.
Panthera leo itself evolved in
Africa between 1 million and 800,000 years ago,
before spreading throughout the
Holarctic
region.
It
appeared in Europe for the first time 700,000 years ago with the
subspecies Panthera leo
fossilis at Isernia
in Italy
. From
this lion derived the later
Cave Lion
(
Panthera leo spelaea), which appeared about 300,000 years
ago. During the upper
Pleistocene the
lion spread to North and South America, and developed into
Panthera leo atrox, the
American
Lion. Lions died out in northern
Eurasia
and America at the end of the last
glaciation, about 10,000 years ago; this may have
been secondary to the
extinction of
Pleistocene megafauna.
Subspecies

African (above) and Asiatic (below)
lions, as illustrated in
Johnsons Book of Nature
Traditionally, twelve recent
subspecies
of lion were recognized, the largest of which has been recognized
as the
Barbary Lion. The major
differences separating these subspecies are location, mane
appearance, size, and distribution. Because these characteristics
are very insignificant and show a high individual variability, most
of these forms were debatable and probably invalid; additionally,
they often were based upon zoo material of unknown origin that may
have had "striking, but abnormal" morphological characteristics.
Today only eight subspecies usually are accepted, but one of these
(the Cape Lion formerly described as
Panthera leo
melanochaita) probably is invalid.Even the remaining seven
subspecies might be too many;
mitochondrial variation in recent African lions
is modest, which suggests that all sub-Saharan lions could be
considered a single subspecies, possibly divided in two main
clades: one to the west of the
Great
Rift Valley and the other to the east.
Lions from Tsavo
in Eastern
Kenya are much closer genetically to lions in Transvaal
(South Africa), than to those in the Aberdare Range
in Western Kenya.
Recent
Eight recent subspecies are recognized today:
- P.
l. persica, known as the Asiatic
Lion or South Asian, Persian, or Indian Lion, once was
widespread from Turkey
, across the
Middle East, to Pakistan
, India
, and even to
Bangladesh
. However, large prides and daylight activity
made them easier to poach than tigers or leopards; now around 300
exist in and near the Gir Forest
of India.
- P. l. leo, known as the Barbary Lion, is extinct in the wild due to
excessive hunting, although captive individuals may still exist.
This was one of the largest of the lion subspecies, with reported
lengths of 3–3.3 metres (10–10.8 ft) and weights of more than
for males. They ranged from Morocco
to Egypt
. The
last wild Barbary lion was killed in Morocco in 1922.
- P.
l. senegalensis, known as the West African Lion, is found in
western Africa, from Senegal
to Nigeria
.
- P. l. azandica, known as the
Northeast Congo Lion, is found in the northeastern parts of the
Congo
.
- P. l. nubica, known as the East
African or Massai Lion, is found in east Africa, from Ethiopia
and Kenya
to Tanzania and Mozambique
.
- P. l. bleyenberghi, known as the
Southwest African or Katanga Lion, is found in southwestern Africa,
Namibia
, Botswana
, Angola
, Katanga
(Zaire
), Zambia
, and
Zimbabwe
.
- P. l. krugeri, known as the
Southeast African Lion or Transvaal Lion, is found in the Transvaal
region of southeastern Africa, including Kruger
National Park
.
- P. l. melanochaita, known as the Cape Lion, became extinct in the wild around 1860.
Results of mitochondrial DNA
research do not support the status as a distinct subspecies. It
seems probable that the Cape lion was only the southernmost
population of the extant P. l. krugeri.
Prehistoric
Several additional subspecies of lion existed in prehistoric
times:
- P. l. atrox, known as the American Lion or American cave lion, was
abundant in the Americas from Alaska
to Peru
in the
Pleistocene Epoch until about 10,000 years ago. This form as
well as the cave lion sometimes are considered to represent
separate species, but recent phylogenetic studies suggest that they
are in fact, subspecies of the lion (Panthera leo). One of
the largest lion subspecies to have existed, its body length is
estimated to have been 1.6–2.5 m (5–8 ft).
- P. l. fossilis, known as the
Early Middle Pleistocene European
cave lion, flourished about 500,000 years ago; fossils have
been recovered from Germany
and Italy
. It
was larger than today's African lions, reaching the American cave
lion in size

- P. l. spelaea, known as the European cave lion, Eurasian cave lion, or Upper
Pleistocene European cave lion, occurred in Eurasia 300,000 to
10,000 years ago. This species is known from Paleolithic cave
paintings (such as the one displayed to the right), ivory carvings, and clay busts, indicating it had
protruding ears, tufted tails, perhaps faint tiger-like stripes,
and that at least some males had a ruff or primitive mane around their
necks. With this example being a hunting scene it is likely that it
depicts females hunting for the pride using the same strategy as
their contemporary relatives and males may not be part of the
subject.
- P. l. vereshchagini, known as the
East Siberian- or Beringian cave
lion, was found in Yakutia
(Russia
), Alaska
(USA
), and the Yukon
Territory
(Canada
).
Analysis of skulls and mandibles of this lion demonstrate that it
is distinctly—larger than the European cave lion and smaller than
the American cave lion with differing skull
proportions.
Dubious
- P. l. sinhaleyus, known as the Sri Lanka Lion, appears to have become
extinct approximately 39,000 years ago.
It is
only known from two teeth found in deposits at Kuruwita
. Based on these teeth, P. Deraniyagala erected this subspecies
in 1939.
- P. l. europaea, known as the European Lion, probably was identical with
Panthera leo persica or Panthera leo spelea; its
status as a subspecies is unconfirmed. It became extinct around 100
AD due to persecution and over-exploitation. It inhabited the
Balkans, the Italian Peninsula, southern France
, and the
Iberian
Peninsula
. It was a very popular object of hunting
among Romans, Greeks, and Macedonians.
- P. l. youngi or Panthera youngi, flourished 350,000
years ago. Its relationship to the extant lion subspecies is
obscure, and it probably represents a distinct species.
- P. l. maculatus, known as the Marozi or Spotted lion, sometimes is believed to be a
distinct subspecies, but may be an adult lion that has retained its
juvenile spotted pattern. If it was a subspecies in its own right,
rather than a small number of aberrantly colored individuals, it
has been extinct since 1931. A less likely identity is a natural
leopard-lion hybrid commonly known
as a leopon.
Hybrids
Lions have been known to
breed with
tigers (most often the
Siberian and
Bengal subspecies) to create hybrids called
ligers and
tigons. They
also have been crossed with
leopards to
produce
leopons, and
jaguars to produce
jaglions. The
marozi is reputedly a spotted lion or a naturally
occurring leopon, while the
Congolese Spotted Lion is a complex
lion-jaguar-leopard hybrid called a
lijagulep.
Such hybrids once commonly were bred in zoos, but this is now
discouraged due to the emphasis on conserving species and
subspecies.
Hybrids are still bred in private menageries
and in zoos in China
.
The liger is a cross between a male lion and a tigress. Because the
growth-inhibiting gene from the female tiger is absent, a
growth-promoting gene is passed on by the male lion, the resulting
ligers grow far larger than either parent. They share physical and
behavioural qualities of both parent species (spots and stripes on
a sandy background). Male ligers are sterile, but female ligers are
often fertile. Males have about a 50 percent chance of having a
mane, but if they grow one, their manes will be modest: around 50
percent of a pure lion mane. Ligers are typically between 3.0 and
3.7 m (10 to 12 feet) in length, and can be between 360 and
450 kg (800 to 1,000 pounds) or more. The less common tigon is
a cross between the lioness and the male tiger.
Physical characteristics
The lion is the tallest (at the shoulder) of the felines, and also
is the second-heaviest feline after the
tiger.
With powerful legs, a strong
jaw, and long
canine
teeth, the lion can bring down and kill
large prey. The skull of the lion is very similar to that of the
tiger, though the frontal region is usually more depressed and
flattened, with a slightly shorter postorbital region. The lion's
skull has broader nasal openings than the tiger. However, due to
the amount of skull variation in the two species, usually, only the
structure of the lower jaw can be used as a reliable indicator of
species. Lion coloration varies from light buff to yellowish,
reddish, or dark ochraceous brown. The underparts are generally
lighter and the tail tuft is black. Lion cubs are born with brown
rosettes (spots) on their body, rather like those of a leopard.
Although these fade as lions reach adulthood, faint spots often may
still be seen on the legs and underparts, particularly on
lionesses.
Lions are the only members of the cat family to display obvious
sexual dimorphism—that is, males
and females look distinctly different. They also have specialized
roles that each gender plays in the pride. For instance, the
lioness, the hunter, lacks the male's thick cumbersome mane. It
seems to impede the male's ability to be camouflaged when stalking
the prey and create overheating in chases. The color of the male's
mane varies from blond to black, generally becoming darker as the
lion grows older.

During confrontations with others, the
mane makes the lion look larger
Weights for adult lions range between 150–250 kg
(330–550 lb) for males and 120–182 kg (264–400 lb)
for females.
Nowell and Jackson report average weights of
181 kg for males and 126 kg for females; one male shot
near Mount
Kenya
was weighed at 272 kg (600 lb).
Lions tend to vary in size depending on their environment and area,
resulting in a wide spread in recorded weights. For instance, lions
in
southern Africa tend to be about
5 percent heavier than those in
East
Africa, in general.
Head and body length is 170–250 cm (5 ft 7 in –
8 ft 2 in) in males and 140–175 cm (4 ft
7 in – 5 ft 9 in) in females; shoulder height is
about 123 cm (4 ft) in males and 107 cm (3 ft
6 in) in females. The tail length is 90–105 cm (2 ft
11 in - 3 ft 5 in) in males and 70–100 cm in females
(2 ft 4 in – 3 ft 3 in).
The longest known
lion was a black-maned male shot near Mucsso, southern Angola
in October
1973; the heaviest known lion was a man-eater shot in 1936 just
outside Hectorspruit in eastern Transvaal
, South Africa and
weighed 313 kg (690 lb). Lions in captivity tend
to be larger than lions in the wild—the heaviest lion on record is
a male at Colchester Zoo in England named Simba in 1970, which
weighed 375 kg (826 lb).
The most distinctive characteristic shared by both females and
males is that the tail ends in a hairy tuft. In some lions, the
tuft conceals a hard "spine" or "spur", approximately 5 mm
long, formed of the final sections of tail bone fused together. The
lion is the only felid to have a tufted tail—the function of the
tuft and spine are unknown. Absent at birth, the tuft develops
around 5½ months of age and is readily identifiable at
7 months.
Mane
The mane of the adult male lion, unique among cats, is one of the
most distinctive characteristics of the species. It makes the lion
appear larger, providing an excellent intimidation display; this
aids the lion during confrontations with other lions and with the
species' chief competitor in Africa, the
spotted hyena. The presence, absence, color,
and size of the mane is associated with genetic precondition,
sexual maturity, climate, and
testosterone production; the rule of thumb is
the darker and fuller the mane, the healthier the lion. Sexual
selection of mates by lionesses favors males with the densest,
darkest mane. Research in
Tanzania also
suggests mane length signals fighting success in male-male
relationships. Darker-maned individuals may have longer
reproductive lives and higher offspring survival, although they
suffer in the hottest months of the year. In prides including a
coalition of two or three males, it is possible that lionesses
solicit mating more actively with the males who are more heavily
maned.

A colour plate displaying mane
variations of lions in East Africa
Scientists once believed that the distinct status of some
subspecies could be justified by
morphology, including the size of the
mane. Morphology was used to identify subspecies such as the
Barbary Lion and
Cape Lion. Research has suggested, however, that
environmental factors influence the color and size of a lion's
mane, such as the
ambient
temperature. The cooler ambient temperature in European and
North American
zoos, for example, may result in
a heavier mane. Thus the mane is not an appropriate marker for
identifying subspecies. The males of the Asiatic subspecies,
however, are characterized by sparser manes than average African
lions.
Maneless
male lions have been reported in Senegal
and Tsavo East National Park
in Kenya, and the original male white lion from
Timbavati also was maneless. Castrated lions have minimal manes. The lack of a
mane sometimes is found in inbred lion populations; inbreeding also
results in poor fertility.

Lioness showing the ruff that
sometimes leads to misidentification as a male
Many lionesses have a
ruff
that may be apparent in certain poses. Sometimes it is indicated in
sculptures and drawings, especially ancient artwork, and is
misinterpreted as a male mane. It differs from a mane, however, in
being at the jaw line below the ears, of much less hair length, and
frequently not noticeable, whereas a mane extends above the ears of
males, often obscuring their outline entirely.
Cave paintings of extinct European
Cave Lions exclusively show animals with
no mane, or just the hint of a mane, suggesting that they were
maneless;.
White lions
The
white lion is not a distinct
subspecies, but a special
morph with a genetic condition,
leucism, that causes paler colouration akin
to that of the
white tiger; the
condition is similar to
melanism, which
causes
black panthers. They are not
albinos, having normal pigmentation in the eyes and skin.
White
Transvaal lion (Panthera leo krugeri) individuals
occasionally have been encountered in and around Kruger
National Park
and the adjacent Timbavati
Private Game Reserve
in eastern South Africa, but are more commonly
found in captivity, where
breeders deliberately select them. The unusual cream color
of their coats is due to a
recessive
gene. Reportedly, they have been bred in camps in South Africa
for use as trophies to be killed during
canned hunts.
Confirmation of the existence of white lions only came in the late
twentieth century. For hundreds of years prior, the white lion had
been thought to be a figment of legend circulating in South Africa,
the white
pelage of the animal said to
represent the goodness in all creatures. Sightings were first
reported in the early 1900s, and continued, infrequently, for
almost fifty years until, in 1975, a litter of white lion cubs was
found at Timbavati Game Reserve.
Biology and behavior
Lions spend much of their time resting and are inactive for about
20 hours per day. Although lions can be active at any time,
their activity generally peaks after dusk with a period of
socializing, grooming, and defecating. Intermittent bursts of
activity follow through the night hours until dawn, when hunting
most often takes place. They spend an average of two hours a day
walking and 50 minutes eating.
Group organization

Mature male pride leader With two
lionesses, northern Serengeti.

A pride spotted along the road in the
Masai Mara National Park in Kenya.
Lions are predatory
carnivores who
manifest two types of social organization. Some are
residents, living in groups, called
prides. The
pride usually consists of approximately five or six related
females, their cubs of both sexes, and one or two males (known as a
coalition if more than one) who mate with the adult
females (although extremely large prides, consisting of up to 30
individuals, have been observed). The coalition of males associated
with a pride usually amounts to two, but may increase to four and
decrease again over time. Male cubs are excluded from their
maternal pride when they reach maturity.
The second organizational behaviour is labeled
nomads, who
range widely and move about sporadically, either singularly or in
pairs. Pairs are more frequent among related males who have been
excluded from their birth pride. Note that a lion may switch
lifestyles; nomads may become residents and vice versa. Males have
to go through this lifestyle and some never are able to join
another pride. A female who becomes a nomad has much greater
difficulty joining a new pride, as the females in a pride are
related, and they reject most attempts by an unrelated female to
join their family group.
The area a pride occupies is called a
pride area, whereas
that by a nomad is a
range. The males associated with a
pride tend to stay on the fringes, patrolling their territory. Why
sociality—the most pronounced in any
cat species—has developed in lionesses is the subject of much
debate. Increased hunting success appears an obvious reason, but
this is less than sure upon examination: coordinated hunting does
allow for more successful predation, but also ensures that
non-hunting members reduce per capita caloric intake, however, some
take a role raising cubs, who may be left alone for extended
periods of time. Members of the pride regularly tend to play the
same role in hunts. The health of the hunters is the primary need
for the survival of the pride and they are the first to consume the
prey at the site it is taken. Other benefits include possible
kin selection (better to share food
with a related lion than with a stranger), protection of the young,
maintenance of territory, and individual insurance against injury
and hunger.

Lioness in a burst of speed while
hunting in the Serengeti
Lionesses do the majority of the hunting for their pride, being
smaller, swifter and more agile than the males, and unencumbered by
the heavy and conspicuous mane, which causes overheating during
exertion. They act as a co-ordinated group in order to stalk and
bring down the prey successfully. However, if nearby the hunt,
males have a tendency to dominate the kill once the lionesses have
succeeded and eaten. They are more likely to share with the cubs
than with the lionesses, but rarely share food they have killed by
themselves. Smaller prey is eaten at the location of the hunt,
thereby being shared among the hunters; when the kill is larger it
often is dragged to the pride area. There is more sharing of larger
kills, although pride members often behave aggressively toward each
other as each tries to consume as much food as possible.
Both males and females defend the pride against intruders. Some
individual lions consistently lead the defense against intruders,
while others lag behind. Lions tend to assume specific roles in the
pride. Those lagging behind may provide other valuable services to
the group. An alternative hypothesis is that there is some reward
associated with being a leader who fends off intruders and the rank
of lionesses in the pride is reflected in these responses. The male
or males associated with the pride must defend their relationship
to the pride from outside males who attempt to take over their
relationship with the pride. Females form the stable
social unit in a pride and do not tolerate
outside females; membership only changes with the births and deaths
of lionesses, although some females do leave and become nomadic.
Subadult males on the other hand, must leave the pride when they
reach maturity at around 2–3 years of age.
Hunting and diet

While a lioness such as this one has
very sharp teeth, prey is usually killed by strangulation
Lions are powerful animals that usually hunt in coordinated groups
and stalk their chosen prey. However, they are not particularly
known for their stamina - for instance, a lioness' heart makes up
only 0.57 percent of her body weight (a male's is about 0.45
percent of his body weight), whereas a hyena's heart is close to 1
percent of its body weight. Thus, although lionesses can reach
speeds of , they only can do so for short bursts so they have to be
close to their prey before starting the attack. They take advantage
of factors that reduce visibility; many kills take place near some
form of cover or at night. They sneak up to the victim until they
reach a distance of approximately 30 metres (98 ft) or
less. Typically, several lionesses work together and encircle the
herd from different points. Once they have closed with a herd, they
usually target the closest prey. The attack is short and powerful;
they attempt to catch the victim with a fast rush and final leap.
The prey usually is killed by
strangulation, which can cause
cerebral ischemia or
asphyxia (which results in
hypoxemic, or "general,"
hypoxia). The prey also may be killed by
the lion enclosing the animal's mouth and nostrils in its jaws
(which would also result in asphyxia). Smaller prey, though, may
simply be killed by a swipe of a lion's paw.

A pride of lions working together to
bring down a buffalo in the Okavango Delta, Botswana

Four lions take down a cape buffalo in
the central Serengeti, Tanzania

Lions at the Savuti river are well
known for their relatively frequent predation on elephants
The
prey consists mainly of large mammals,
with a preference for
wildebeest,
impalas,
zebras,
buffalo, and
warthogs in Africa and
nilgai,
wild boar, and several
deer
species in India. Many other species are hunted, based on
availability. Mainly this will include
ungulates weighing between 50 and 300 kg
(110–660 lb) such as
kudu,
hartebeest,
gemsbok, and
eland. Occasionally, they take
relatively small species such as
Thomson's Gazelle or
springbok.
Lions living near the
Namib
coast feed
extensively on seals. Lions hunting
in groups are capable of taking down most animals, even healthy
adults, but in most parts of their range they rarely attack very
large prey such as fully grown male
giraffes
due to the danger of injury.
Extensive statistics collected over various studies show that lions
normally feed on mammals in the range 190–550 kg
(420–1210 lb).
Wildebeest rank at the top of preferred prey
(making nearly half of the lion prey in the Serengeti
) followed by zebra. Most adult
hippopotamuses,
rhinoceroses,
elephants,
and smaller
gazelles,
impala, and other agile antelopes are generally
excluded. However giraffes and buffalos are often taken in certain
regions. For instance, in Kruger National Park, giraffes are
regularly hunted. In Manyara Park, Cape buffaloes constitute as
much as 62% of the lion's diet, due to the high number density of
buffaloes. Occasionally hippopotamus is also taken, but adult
rhinoceroses are generally avoided. Even though smaller than
190 kg (420 lb), warthogs are often taken depending on
availability. In some areas, they specialise in hunting atypical
prey species; this is the case at the
Savuti river,
where they prey on elephants. Park guides in the area reported that
the lions, driven by extreme hunger, started taking down baby
elephants, and then moved on to adolescents and, occasionally,
fully grown adults during the night when elephants' vision is poor.
Lions also attack domestic livestock; in India cattle contribute
significantly to their diet. They are capable of killing other
predators such as
leopards,
cheetahs,
hyenas, and
wild dogs, though (unlike most felids) they
seldom devour the competitors after killing them. They also
scavenge animals either dead from natural causes or killed by other
predators, and keep a constant lookout for circling vultures, being
keenly aware that they indicate an animal dead or in distress. A
lion may gorge itself and eat up to 30 kg (66 lb) in one
sitting; if it is unable to consume all the kill it will rest for a
few hours before consuming more. On a hot day, the pride may
retreat to shade leaving a male or two to stand guard. An adult
lioness requires an average of about 5 kg (11 lb) of meat
per day, a male about 7 kg (15.4 lb).

The hunters of a pride sharing a zebra
where the kill occurred
Because lionesses hunt in open spaces where they are easily seen by
their prey, cooperative hunting increases the likelihood of a
successful hunt; this is especially true with larger species.
Teamwork also enables them to defend their kills more easily
against other large predators such as hyenas, which may be
attracted by
vultures from kilometers away
in open savannas. Lionesses do most of the hunting; males attached
to prides do not usually participate in hunting, except in the case
of larger quarry such as giraffe and buffalo. In typical hunts,
each lioness has a favored position in the group, either stalking
prey on the "wing" then attacking, or moving a smaller distance in
the centre of the group and capturing prey in flight from other
lionesses.
Young lions first display stalking behavior around three months of
age, although they do not participate in hunting until they are
almost a year old. They begin to hunt effectively when nearing the
age of two.
Reproduction and life cycle
Most lionesses will have reproduced by the time they are four years
of age. Lions do not
mate at any specific
time of year, and the females are
polyestrous. As with other cats, the
male lion's penis has spines which point backwards. Upon withdrawal
of the penis, the spines rake the walls of the female's vagina,
which may cause ovulation. A lioness may mate with more than one
male when she is
in heat; during a
mating bout, which could last several days, the couple copulates
twenty to forty times a day and are likely to forgo eating. Lions
reproduce very well in captivity.

During a mating bout, a couple may
copulate 20 to 40 times a day for several days
The average gestation period is around 110 days, the female
giving birth to a litter of one to four cubs in a secluded den
(which may be a thicket, a reed-bed, a cave or some other sheltered
area) usually away from the rest of the pride. She will often hunt
by herself whilst the cubs are still helpless, staying relatively
close to the thicket or den where the cubs are kept. The cubs
themselves are born blind—their eyes do not open until roughly a
week after birth. They weigh 1.2–2.1 kg (2.6–4.6 lb) at
birth and are almost helpless, beginning to crawl a day or two
after birth and walking around three weeks of age. The lioness
moves her cubs to a new den site several times a month, carrying
them one by one by the nape of the neck, to prevent scent from
building up at a single den site and thus avoiding the attention of
predators that may harm the cubs.
Usually, the mother does not integrate herself and her cubs back
into the pride until the cubs are six to eight weeks old. However,
sometimes this introduction to pride life occurs earlier,
particularly if other lionesses have given birth at about the same
time. For instance, lionesses in a pride often synchronize their
reproductive cycles so that they cooperate in the raising and
suckling of the young (once the cubs are past the initial stage of
isolation with their mother), who suckle indiscriminately from any
or all of the nursing females in the pride. In addition to greater
protection, the synchronization of births also has an advantage in
that the cubs end up being roughly the same size, and thus have an
equal chance of survival. If one lioness gives birth to a litter of
cubs a couple of months after another lioness, for instance, then
the younger cubs, being much smaller than their older brethren, are
usually dominated by larger cubs at mealtimes—consequently, death
by starvation is more common amongst the younger cubs.

In addition to starvation, cubs also face many other dangers, such
as predation by jackals, hyenas, leopards, martial eagles and
snakes. Even buffaloes, should they catch the scent of lion cubs,
often stampede towards the thicket or den where they are being
kept, doing their best to trample the cubs to death whilst warding
off the lioness. Furthermore, when one or more new males oust the
previous male(s) associated with a pride, the conqueror(s) often
kill any existing young cubs, perhaps because females do not become
fertile and receptive until their cubs mature or die. All in all,
as many as 80 percent of the cubs will die before the age of
two.
When first introduced to the rest of the pride, the cubs initially
lack confidence when confronted with adult lions other than their
mother. However, they soon begin to immerse themselves in the pride
life, playing amongst themselves or attempting to initiate play
with the adults. Lionesses with cubs of their own are more likely
to be tolerant of another lioness's cubs than lionesses without
cubs. The tolerance of the male lions towards the cubs
varies—sometimes, a male will patiently let the cubs play with his
tail or his mane, whereas another may snarl and bat the cubs
away.

The tolerance of male lions towards
the cubs varies.
They are, however, generally more likely to share food with
the cubs than with the lionesses.
Weaning occurs after six to seven months. Male lions reach maturity
at about 3 years of age and, at 4–5 years of age, are capable of
challenging and displacing the adult male(s) associated with
another pride. They begin to age and weaken between 10 and 15 years
of age at the latest, if they have not already been critically
injured whilst defending the pride (once ousted from a pride by
rival males, male lions rarely manage a second take-over). This
leaves a short window for their own offspring to be born and
mature. If they are able to procreate as soon as they take over a
pride, potentially, they may have more offspring reaching maturity
before they also are displaced. A lioness often will attempt to
defend her cubs fiercely from a usurping male, but such actions are
rarely successful. He usually kills all of the existing cubs who
are less than two years old. A lioness is weaker and much lighter
than a male; success is more likely when a group of three or four
mothers within a pride join forces against one male.
Contrary to popular belief, it is not only males that are ousted
from their pride to become nomads, although the majority of females
certainly do remain with their birth pride. However, when the pride
becomes too large, the next generation of female cubs may be forced
to leave to eke out their own territory. Furthermore, when a new
male lion takes over the pride, subadult lions, both male and
female, may be evicted. Life is harsh for a female nomad. Nomadic
lionesses rarely manage to raise their cubs to maturity, without
the protection of other pride members.
One scientific study reports that both males and females may
interact
homosexually. Male
lions pair-bond for a number of days and initiate homosexual
activity with affectionate nuzzling and caressing, leading to
mounting and thrusting. A study found that about 8 percent of
mountings have been observed to occur with other males. Female
pairings are held to be fairly common in captivity, but have not
been observed in the wild.
Health
Though adult lions have no natural predators, evidence suggests
that the majority die violently from humans or other lions. This is
particularly true of male lions, who, as the main defenders of the
pride, are more likely to come into aggressive contact with rival
males. In fact, even though a male lion may reach an age of 15 or
16 years if he manages to avoid being ousted by other males, the
majority of adult males do not live to be more than 10 years old.
This is why the average lifespan of a male lion tends to be
significantly less than that of a lioness in the wild. However,
members of both sexes can be injured or even killed by other lions
when two prides with overlapping territories come into conflict.

One of the tree climbing Lions of the
Serengeti, Tanzania
Various species of
tick commonly infest the
ears, neck and groin regions of most lions. Adult forms of several
species of the tapeworm genus
Taenia have been isolated from
intestines, the lions having ingested larval forms from antelope
meat.
Lions in the Ngorongoro
Crater
were afflicted by an outbreak of stable fly
(Stomoxys calcitrans) in 1962;
this resulted in lions becoming covered in bloody bare patches and
emaciated. Lions sought unsuccessfully to evade the biting
flies by climbing trees or crawling into hyena burrows; many
perished or emigrated as the population dropped from 70 to 15
individuals. A more recent outbreak in 2001 killed six lions.
Lions, especially in captivity, are vulnerable to the
Canine distemper virus
(CDV),
feline
immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and
feline infectious peritonitis
(FIP). CDV is spread through domestic dogs and other
carnivores; a 1994 outbreak in
Serengeti National Park resulted in
many lions developing neurological symptoms such as seizures.
During the outbreak, several lions died from pneumonia and
encephalitis. FIV, which is similar to
HIV while not known to adversely affect lions, is
worrisome enough in its effect in domestic cats that the Species
Survival Plan recommends systematic testing in captive lions. It
occurs with high to endemic frequency in several wild lion
populations, but is mostly absent from Asiatic and Namibian
lions.
Communication

Head rubbing and licking are common
social behaviors within a pride
When resting, lion socialization occurs through a number of
behaviors, and the animal's expressive movements are highly
developed. The most common peaceful tactile gestures are head
rubbing and social licking, which have been compared with grooming
in primates. Head rubbing—nuzzling one's forehead, face and neck
against another lion—appears to be a form of greeting, as it is
seen often after an animal has been apart from others, or after a
fight or confrontation. Males tend to rub other males, while cubs
and females rub females. Social licking often occurs in tandem with
head rubbing; it is generally mutual and the recipient appears to
express pleasure. The head and neck are the most common parts of
the body licked, which may have arisen out of utility, as a lion
cannot lick these areas individually.
Lions have an array of facial expressions and body postures that
serve as visual gestures. Their repertoire of vocalizations is also
large; variations in intensity and pitch, rather than discrete
signals, appear central to communication. Lion sounds include
snarling, purring, hissing, coughing, miaowing, woofing and
roaring. Lions tend to
roar in a very
characteristic manner, starting with a few deep, long roars that
trail off into a series of shorter ones. They most often roar at
night; the sound, which can be heard from a distance of , is used
to advertise the animal's presence. Lions have the loudest roar of
any big cat.
Interspecific predatory relationships
In areas where lions and
spotted
hyenas are sympatric, the two species occupy the same
ecological niche, and are thus in direct competition with one
another. In some cases, the extent of dietary overlap can be as
high as 68.8%. Lions typically ignore spotted hyenas, unless they
are on a kill or are being harassed by them. Spotted hyenas
themselves tend to visibly react to the presence of lions, whether
there is food or not. Lions will readily appropriate the kills of
spotted hyenas: in the Ngorongoro crater, it is common for lions to
subsist largely on kills stolen from hyenas, causing the hyenas to
increase their kill rate. Lions are quick to follow the calls of
hyenas feeding, a fact which was proven by Dr. Hans Kruuk, who
found that lions repeatedly approached him whenever he played the
tape-recorded calls of hyenas feeding. When confronted on a kill by
lions, spotted hyenas will either leave or wait patiently at a
distance of 30-100 metres until the lions have finished. In some
cases, spotted hyenas are bold enough to feed alongside lions, and
may occasionally force the lions off a kill. The two species may
act aggressively toward one another even when there is no food
involved.
Lions may charge at hyenas and maul them for
no apparent reason: one male lion was filmed killing two matriarch
hyenas on separate occasions without eating them, and lion
predation can account for up to 71% of hyena deaths in Etosha
.
Spotted hyenas have adapted to this pressure by frequently mobbing
lions which enter their territories. Experiments on captive spotted
hyenas revealed that specimens with no prior experience with lions
act indifferently to the sight of them, but will react fearfully to
the scent.
Lions tend to dominate smaller felines such as
cheetahs and
leopards in
areas where they are sympatric. They will steal their kills and
will kill their cubs and even adults when given the chance. The
cheetah has a 50 percent chance of losing its kill to lions or
other predators. Lions are major killers of cheetah cubs, up to 90
percent of which are lost in their first weeks of life due to
attacks by other predators. Cheetahs avoid competition by hunting
at different times of the day and hide their cubs in thick brush.
Leopards also use such tactics, but have the advantage of being
able to subsist much better on small prey than either lions or
cheetahs. Also, unlike cheetahs, leopards can climb trees and use
them to keep their cubs and kills away from lions. However,
lionesses will occasionally be successful in climbing to retrieve
leopard kills. Similarly, lions dominate
African wild dogs, not only taking their
kills but also preying on both young and adult dogs (although the
latter are rarely caught).
The
Nile crocodile is the only
sympatric predator (besides humans) that can singly threaten the
lion. Depending on the size of the crocodile and the lion, either
can lose kills or carrion to the other. Lions have been known to
kill crocodiles venturing onto land, while the reverse is true for
lions entering waterways containing crocodiles, as evidenced by the
fact that lion claws have on occasion been found in crocodile
stomachs.
Distribution and habitat
In Africa, lions can be found in savanna grasslands with scattered
Acacia trees which serve as shade;
their habitat in India is a mixture of dry savanna forest and very
dry deciduous scrub forest.
In relatively recent times the habitat of
lions spanned the southern parts of Eurasia,
ranging from Greece
to India
, and most of
Africa except the central rainforest-zone and the Sahara desert. Herodotus reported that lions had been common in
Greece around 480 BC; they attacked the baggage camels of the
Persian king
Xerxes on his march
through the country.
Aristotle considered
them rare by 300 BC. By 100 AD they were extirpated. A population
of the
Asiatic Lion survived until the
tenth century in the
Caucasus, their last
European outpost.
The species was eradicated from
Palestine
by the
Middle Ages and from most of the
rest of Asia after the arrival of readily available firearms in the
eighteenth century. Between the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century they became extinct in
North
Africa and the
Middle East.
By the
late nineteenth century the lion had disappeared from Turkey
and most of
northern India, while the last sighting of a live Asiatic lion in
Iran
was in 1941 (between Shiraz
and Jahrom,
Fars
Province
), though
the corpse of a lioness was found on the banks of Karun river, Khūzestān Province
in 1944. There are no subsequent reliable reports
from Iran
.
The
subspecies now survives only in and around the Gir
Forest
of northwestern India. About 300 lions live
in a 1,412 km² (558 square miles) sanctuary in the state of
Gujarat
, which covers most of the forest. Their
numbers are slowly increasing.
They were
found in most of Africa, much of Eurasia from western Europe to
India and the Bering land bridge, and in
the Americas from Yukon
to
Peru. Parts of this range were occupied by subspecies that
are extinct today.
Population and conservation status
Most lions now live in eastern and southern Africa, and their
numbers there are rapidly decreasing, with an estimated 30–50
percent decline over the last two decades. Currently, estimates of
the African lion population range between 16,500 and 47,000 living
in the wild in 2002–2004, down from early 1990s estimates that
ranged as high as 100,000 and perhaps 400,000 in 1950. The cause of
the decline is not well-understood, and may not be reversible.
Currently, habitat loss and conflicts with humans are considered
the most significant threats to the species. The remaining
populations are often geographically isolated from each other,
which can lead to
inbreeding, and
consequently, a lack of
genetic
diversity. Therefore the lion is considered a
vulnerable species by the
International
Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources, while
the Asiatic subspecies is
critically endangered. The
lion population in the region of West Africa is isolated from lion
populations of Central Africa, with little or no exchange of
breeding individuals. The number of mature individuals in West
Africa is estimated by two separate recent surveys at 850–1,160
(2002/2004).
There is disagreement over the size of the
largest individual population in West Africa: the estimates range
from 100 to 400 lions in Burkina Faso
's Arly-Singou
ecosystem.
Conservation of both African and Asian lions
has required the setup and maintenance of national parks and game
reserves; among the best known are Etosha National Park
in Namibia
, Serengeti
National Park in Tanzania, and Kruger National Park
in eastern South
Africa. Outside these areas, the issues arising from
lions' interaction with livestock and people usually results in the
elimination of the former.
In India, the last refuge of the Asiatic
lion is the 1,412 km² (558 square miles) Gir Forest
National Park
in western India
which had
about 359 lions (as of April 2006). As in Africa,
numerous human habitations are close by with the resultant problems
between lions, livestock, locals and wildlife officials.
The
Asiatic Lion
Reintroduction Project plans to establish a second independent
population of Asiatic Lions at the
Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary in
the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh
. It is important to start a second
population to serve as a
gene pool for the
last surviving Asiatic lions and to help develop and maintain
genetic diversity enabling the
species to survive.

Lion cub playing with a piece of
bark.
The former popularity of the Barbary lion as a zoo animal has meant
that scattered lions in captivity are likely to be descended from
Barbary Lion stock.
This includes twelve lions at Port Lympne
Wild Animal Park
in
Kent
, England
that are descended from animals owned by the
King of Morocco. Another eleven
animals believed to be Barbary lions were found in Addis Ababa
zoo, descendants of animals owned by Emperor Haile Selassie.
WildLink
International, in collaboration with Oxford University
, launched their ambitious International Barbary Lion Project
with the aim of identifying and breeding Barbary lions in captivity
for eventual reintroduction into a national park in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco
.
Following the discovery of the decline of lion population in
Africa, several coordinated efforts involving lion
conservation have been organised in an
attempt to stem this decline.Lions are one species included in the
Species Survival Plan, a
coordinated attempt by the
Association of Zoos and
Aquariums to increase its chances of survival. The plan was
originally started in 1982 for the Asiatic lion, but was suspended
when it was found that most Asiatic lions in North American zoos
were not
genetically pure, having
been hybridized with African lions. The African lion plan started
in 1993, focusing especially on the South African subspecies,
although there are difficulties in assessing the genetic diversity
of captive lions, since most individuals are of unknown origin,
making maintenance of genetic diversity a problem.
Man-eaters
While
lions do not usually hunt people, some (usually males) seem to seek
out human prey; well-publicized cases include the Tsavo maneaters, where 28 railway workers
building the Kenya-Uganda Railway
were taken by lions over nine months during the construction of a
bridge over the Tsavo River in Kenya
in 1898, and
the 1991 Mfuwe man-eater, which killed six
people in the Laungwa River Valley in Zambia
. In
both, the hunters who killed the lions wrote books detailing the
animals' predatory behavior. The Mfuwe and Tsavo incidents bear
similarities: the lions in both incidents were larger than normal,
lacked manes, and seemed to suffer from
tooth decay. The infirmity theory, including
tooth decay, is not favored by all researchers; an analysis of
teeth and jaws of man-eating lions in museum collections suggests
that, while tooth decay may explain some incidents, prey depletion
in human-dominated areas is a more likely cause of lion predation
on humans. In their analysis of Tsavo and man-eating generally,
Kerbis Peterhans and Gnoske acknowledge that sick or injured
animals may be more prone to man-eating, but that the behavior is
"not unusual, nor necessarily 'aberrant'" where the opportunity
exists; if inducements such as access to livestock or human corpses
are present, lions will regularly prey upon human beings. The
authors note that the relationship is well-attested amongst other
pantherines and primates in the paleontological record.
The lion's proclivity for man-eating has been systematically
examined. American and Tanzanian scientists report that man-eating
behavior in rural areas of Tanzania increased greatly from 1990 to
2005. At least 563 villagers were attacked and many eaten over this
period—a number far exceeding the more famed "Tsavo" incidents of a
century earlier.
The incidents occurred near Selous
National Park
in Rufiji
District
and in
Lindi
Province
near the
Mozambican
border. While the expansion of villagers
into bush country is one concern, the authors argue that
conservation policy must mitigate the danger because, in this case,
conservation contributes directly to human deaths. Cases in Lindi
have been documented where lions seize humans from the center of
substantial villages.
Author Robert R. Frump wrote in
The Man-eaters of Eden
that Mozambican refugees regularly crossing Kruger National Park at
night in
South Africa are attacked and
eaten by the lions; park officials have conceded that man-eating is
a problem there. Frump believes thousands may have been killed in
the decades after
apartheid sealed the park and
forced the refugees to cross the park at night. For nearly a
century before the border was sealed, Mozambicans had regularly
walked across the park in daytime with little harm.
Packer estimates more than 200 Tanzanians are killed each year by
lions,
crocodiles, elephants, hippos, and
snakes, and that the numbers could be double
that amount, with lions thought to kill at least 70 of those.
Packer and Ikanda are among the few
conservationists who believe western
conservation efforts must take account of these matters not just
because of ethical concerns about human life, but also for the long
term success of conservation efforts and lion preservation.
A man-eating lion was killed by game scouts in Southern Tanzania in
April 2004. It is believed to have killed and eaten at least
35 people in a series of incidents covering several villages
in the Rufiji Delta coastal region. Dr Rolf D. Baldus, the GTZ
wildlife programme coordinator, commented that it was likely that
the lion preyed on humans because it had a large
abscess underneath a
molar which was cracked in several places. He
further commented that "This lion probably experienced a lot of
pain, particularly when it was chewing." GTZ is the German
development cooperation agency and has been working with the
Tanzanian government on wildlife conservation for nearly two
decades. As in other cases this lion was large, lacked a mane, and
had a tooth problem.
The "All-Africa" record of man-eating generally is considered to be
not Tsavo, but the lesser-known incidents in the late 1930s through
the late 1940s in what was then
Tanganyika (now Tanzania).
George Rushby, game
warden and professional hunter, eventually dispatched the pride,
which over three generations is thought to have killed and eaten
1,500 to 2,000 in what is now Njombe
district.
In captivity

Lion in captivity
Widely seen in captivity, lions are part of a group of exotic
animals that are the core of
zoo exhibits since
the late eighteenth century; members of this group are invariably
large vertebrates and include elephants, rhinoceroses,
hippopotamuses, large primates, and other big cats; zoos sought to
gather as many of these species as possible. Though many modern
zoos are more selective about their exhibits, there are over 1000
African and 100 Asiatic lions in zoos and wildlife parks around the
world. They are considered an ambassador species and are kept for
tourism, education and conservation purposes.
Lions can reach an
age of over 20 years in captivity; Apollo, a resident lion of
Honolulu
Zoo
in Honolulu
, Hawaii
, died at
age 22 in August 2007. His two sisters, born in 1986, are
still living. A zoo-based lion breeding programme usually takes
into account the separation of the various lion subspecies, while
mitigating the
inbreeding that is likely to
occur when animals are divided by subspecies.
Lions were kept and bred by Assyrian kings as early as 850 BC, and
Alexander the Great was said to
have been presented with tame lions by the
Malhi of northern India. Later in
Roman times, lions were kept by emperors to take
part in the gladiator arenas. Roman notables, including
Sulla,
Pompey,
and
Julius Caesar, often ordered the
mass slaughter of hundreds of lions at a time. In the East, lions
were tamed by Indian princes, and
Marco
Polo reported that
Kublai Khan kept
lions inside. The first European "zoos" spread amongst noble and
royal families in the thirteenth century, and until the seventeenth
century were called
seraglios; at that
time, they came to be called
menageries,
an extension of the
cabinet of
curiosities. They spread from France and Italy during the
Renaissance to the rest of Europe.
In
England, although the seraglio tradition was less developed, Lions
were kept at the Tower of
London in a seraglio established by King John in the thirteenth century,
probably stocked with animals from an earlier menagerie started in
1125 by Henry I at his palace in
Woodstock
, near Oxford
; where
lions had been reported stocked by William of Malmesbury.
Seraglios served as expressions of the nobility's power and wealth.
Animals such as big cats and
elephants, in
particular, symbolized power, and would be pitted in fights against
each other or domesticated animals. By extension, menageries and
seraglios served as demonstrations of the dominance of humanity
over nature. Consequently, the defeat of such natural "lords" by a
cow in 1682 astonished the spectators, and the flight of an
elephant before a rhinoceros drew jeers. Such fights would slowly
fade out in the seventeenth century with the spread of the
menagerie and their appropriation by the commoners. The tradition
of keeping big cats as pets would last into the nineteenth century,
at which time it was seen as highly eccentric.
The presence of lions at the Tower of London was intermittent,
being restocked when a monarch or his consort, such as
Margaret of Anjou the wife of
Henry VI, either sought or were given
animals.
Records indicate they were kept in poor
conditions there in the seventeenth century, in contrast to more
open conditions in Florence
at the time. The menagerie was open to the
public by the eighteenth century; admission was a sum of three
half-pence or the supply of a cat or dog for feeding to the lions.
A rival
menagerie at the Exeter
Exchange
also
exhibited lions until the early nineteenth century.
The Tower
menagerie was closed down by William IV, and animals
transferred to the London
Zoo
which opened its gates to the public on 27 April
1828.
The wild animals trade flourished alongside improved colonial trade
of the nineteenth century. Lions were considered fairly common and
inexpensive. Although they would barter higher than tigers, they
were less costly than larger, or more difficult to transport
animals such as the giraffe and hippopotamus, and much less than
pandas. Like other animals, lions were
seen as little more than a natural, boundless commodity that was
mercilessly exploited with terrible losses in capture and
transportation. The widely reproduced imagery of the heroic hunter
chasing lions would dominate a large part of the century. Explorers
and hunters exploited a popular
Manichean division of animals into "good" and
"evil" to add thrilling value to their adventures, casting
themselves as heroic figures. This resulted in big cats, always
suspected of being man-eaters, representing "both the fear of
nature and the satisfaction of having overcome it."
Lions were kept in cramped and squalid conditions at London Zoo
until a larger lion house with roomier cages was built in the
1870s. Further changes took place in the early twentieth century,
when
Carl Hagenbeck designed
enclosures more closely resembling a natural habitat, with concrete
'rocks', more open space and a moat instead of bars.
He designed lion
enclosures for both Melbourne
Zoo
and Sydney's Taronga Zoo
, among others, in the early twentieth
century. Though his designs were popular, the old bars and
cage enclosures prevailed until the 1960s in many zoos.
In the
later decades of the twentieth century, larger, more natural
enclosures and the use of wire mesh or laminated glass instead of lowered dens
allowed visitors to come closer than ever to the animals, with some
attractions even placing the den on ground higher than visitors,
such as the Cat Forest/Lion Overlook of Oklahoma
City Zoological Park
. Lions are now housed in much larger
naturalistic areas; modern recommended guidelines more closely
approximate conditions in the wild with closer attention to the
lions' needs, highlighting the need for dens in separate areas,
elevated positions in both sun and shade where lions can sit and
adequate ground cover and drainage as well as sufficient space to
roam.
There have also been instances where a lion was kept by a private
individual, such as the lioness
Elsa, who was raised by
George Adamson and his wife
Joy Adamson and came to develop a strong bonds
with them, particularly the latter. The lioness later achieved
fame, her life being documented in a series of books and
films.
Baiting and taming
Lion-baiting is a
blood sport involving
the
baiting of lions in combat with
other animals, usually dogs. Records of it exist in ancient times
through until the seventeenth century.
It was finally banned
in Vienna
by 1800
and England in 1825.
Lion taming refers to the practice of taming lions for
entertainment, either as part of an established
circus or as an individual act, such as
Siegfried & Roy. The term is also
often used for the taming and display of other big cats such as
tigers,
leopards, and
cougars. The practice was pioneered in the
first half of the nineteenth century by Frenchman Henri Martin and
American Isaac Van Amburgh who both toured widely, and whose
techniques were copied by a number of followers.
Van Amburgh performed
before Queen Victoria of
the United Kingdom in 1838 when he toured Great Britain
. Martin composed a
pantomime titled
Les Lions de Mysore
("the lions of Mysore"), an idea that Amburgh quickly borrowed.
These acts eclipsed
equestrianism acts
as the central display of circus shows, but truly entered public
consciousness in the early twentieth century with cinema. In
demonstrating the superiority of human over animal, lion taming
served a purpose similar to animal fights of previous centuries.
The now iconic lion tamer's chair was possibly first used by
American
Clyde Beatty
(1903–1965).
Cultural depictions

Carter of Castle Martin coat of arms
showing "rampant combatant" lions.

Flag of Sri Lanka
The lion has been an icon for humanity for thousands of years,
appearing in cultures across Europe, Asia, and Africa. Despite
incidents of attacks on humans, lions have enjoyed a positive
depiction in culture as strong but noble. A common depiction is
their representation as "
king of the
jungle" or "king of the beasts"; hence, the lion has been a popular
symbol of royalty and stateliness, as well as a symbol of bravery;
it is featured in several
fables of
the
sixth century BC Greek storyteller
Aesop.
Representations of lions date back
32,000 years; the lion-headed ivory
carving from Vogelherd cave in the Swabian Alb
in southwestern Germany
has been determined to be about 32,000 years
old from the Aurignacian culture.
Two lions
were depicted mating in the Chamber of Felines in 15,000-year-old
Paleolithic cave paintings in the Lascaux
caves. Cave lions are also depicted in the Chauvet Cave
, discovered in 1994; this has been dated at
32,000 years of age, though it may be of similar or younger
age to Lascaux.
Ancient Egypt venerated the lioness
(the fierce hunter) as their
war
deities and among those in the
Egyptian pantheon are,
Bast,
Mafdet,
Menhit,
Pakhet,
Sekhmet,
Tefnut, and the
Sphinx; Among the Egyptian pantheon also are
sons of these goddesses such as,
Maahes, and,
as attested by Egyptians as a
Nubian deity,
Dedun.
Careful examination of the lion deities noted in many ancient
cultures reveal that many are lioness also. Admiration for the
co-operative hunting strategies of lionesses was evident in very
ancient times. Most of the
lion gates depict lionesses.
The
Nemean lion was symbolic in Ancient
Greece and Rome, represented as the constellation and zodiac sign
Leo, and described in mythology,
where its skin was borne by the hero
Heracles.
The lion is the biblical emblem of the
tribe of Judah and later the
Kingdom of Judah. It is contained within
Jacob's blessing to his fourth son in the penultimate chapter of
the
Book of Genesis, "Judah is a
lion's whelp; On prey, my son have you grown. He crouches, lies
down like a lion, like the king of beasts—who dare rouse him?"
(Genesis 49:9).
In the modern state of Israel
, the lion
remains the symbol of the capital city of Jerusalem
, emblazoned on both the flag and coat of arms of the
city.
The lion was a prominent symbol in both the
Old Babylonian and
Neo-Babylonian Empire periods. The
classic Babylonian lion motif, found as a statue, carved or painted
on walls, is often referred to as the
striding lion of
Babylon. It is in Babylon that the biblical
Daniel is said to have been delivered from the lion's
den. Such symbolism was appropriated by Saddam Hussein's regime in
Iraq for their
Lion of Babylon
tank, with the technology adapted from a Russian model.
In the
Puranic texts of
Hinduism,
Narasimha
("man-lion") a half-lion, half-man incarnation or (
avatara) of
Vishnu, is
worshipped by his devotees and saved the child devotee
Prahlada from his father, the evil demon king
Hiranyakashipu; Vishnu takes the form
of half-man/half-
lion, in Narasimha,
having a human torso and lower body, but with a lion-like face and
claws. Narasimha is worshiped as "Lion God."
Singh is an ancient Indian
vedic name meaning "lion" (Asiatic lion), dating back over 2000 years to
ancient India. It was
originally only used by
Rajputs a
Hindu Kshatriya or military
caste in India. After the birth of the
Khalsa brotherhood in 1699, the
Sikhs also adopted the name "Singh" due to the wishes
of
Guru Gobind Singh. Along with
millions of Hindu Rajputs today, it is also used by over 20 million
Sikhs worldwide.
Found famously on numerous
flags and
coats of arms all across Asia and Europe, the
Asiatic lions also stand firm on the
National Emblem of India..
Farther
south on the Indian
subcontinent, the Asiatic lion is symbolic for the Sinhalese, Sri Lanka
's ethnic majority; the term derived from the
Indo-Aryan Sinhala, meaning the "lion people" or "people
with lion blood", while a sword wielding lion is the central figure
on the national flag of Sri
Lanka.
The Asiatic lion is a common motif in
Chinese art. They were first used in art during
the late
Spring and Autumn
Period (fifth or sixth century BC), and became much more
popular during the
Han Dynasty (206 BC –
AD 220), when
imperial guardian
lions started to be placed in front of imperial palaces for
protection. Because lions have never been native to China, early
depictions were somewhat unrealistic; after the introduction of
Buddhist art to China in the
Tang Dynasty (after the sixth century AD),
lions were usually depicted without wings, their bodies became
thicker and shorter, and their manes became curly. The
lion dance is a form of traditional dance in
Chinese culture in which performers
mimic a lion's movements in a lion costume, often with musical
accompaniment from cymbals, drums and gongs. They are performed at
Chinese New Year, the
August Moon Festival and other
celebratory occasions for good luck.
The
island nation of Singapore
(Singapura) derives its name from the
Malay words (lion) and (city), which
in turn is from the Tamil-Sanskrit சிங்க singa and புர , which is
cognate to the Greek ,
pólis. According to the Malay Annals, this name was given by a
fourteenth century Sumatran
Malay prince named Sang
Nila Utama, who, on alighting the island after a thunderstorm,
spotted an auspicious beast on shore that his chief minister
identified as a lion (Asiatic lion).
"
Aslan" or "
Arslan
(Ottoman ارسلان
arslān and اصلان
aṣlān) is the
Turkish and
Mongolian word for "lion". It was used as
a title by a number of
Seljuk and
Ottoman rulers, including
Alp Arslan and
Ali
Pasha, and is a
Turkic/
Iranian name.
"Lion" was the nickname of medieval warrior rulers with a
reputation for bravery, such as
Richard I of England, known as Richard
the Lionheart,,
Henry the Lion ( ),
Duke of Saxony and
Robert III of Flanders nicknamed "The
Lion of Flanders"—a major
Flemish national
icon up to the present. Lions are frequently depicted on
coats of arms, either as a device on shields
themselves, or as
supporters. (The
lioness is much more infrequent.) The formal language of
heraldry, called
blazon,
employs French terms to describe the images precisely. Such
descriptions specified whether lions or other creatures were
"rampant" or "passant", that is whether they were rearing or
crouching. "Rampant" lions are common charges in heraldry.
For
example, the arms of the Carter of Castle Martin family, Ireland
(see Carter-Campbell of Possil) include
a pair of "rampant" combatant lions. The lion is used as a
symbol of sporting teams, from national association football teams
such as
England,
Scotland and
Singapore to famous
clubs such as the
Detroit Lions of the
NFL,
Chelsea and
Aston Villa of the
English Premier League, (and the
Premiership itself) to a
host of smaller
clubs around the world. Villa sport a Scottish
Lion Rampant on their crest, as do
Rangers and
Dundee United of the
Scottish Premier League.
Lions continue to feature in modern literature, from the messianic
Aslan in
The Lion, the Witch and the
Wardrobe and following books from
The Chronicles of Narnia series
written by
C. S. Lewis, to the
comedic
Cowardly Lion in
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
The advent of moving pictures saw the continued presence of lion
symbolism; one of the most iconic and widely recognised lions is
Leo the Lion, the mascot for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
studios, which has been in use since the 1920s. The 1960s saw the
appearance of what is possibly the most famous lioness, the Kenyan
animal
Elsa in the movie
Born Free, based on the true-life
international bestselling book of the same title. The lion's role
as King of the Beasts has been used in cartoons, from the 1950s
manga which gave rise to the first Japanese colour TV animation
series,
Kimba the White
Lion, Leonardo Lion of
King Leonardo and his Short
Subjects, both from the 1960s, up to the 1994
Disney animated feature film
The Lion King, which also
featured the popular song "
The
Lion Sleeps Tonight" in its soundtrack. A lion appears on the
South African 50-Rand banknotes (see
South African
rand).
Notes
- Database entry includes a lengthy justification of why this
species is vulnerable.
- . As in other ancient scripts, in Ancient Egyptian only the
consonants are written. No distinction was made between 'l' and
'r'.
- Barbary Lion - Panthera leo leo - Largest Lion
Subspecies Retrieved on 19 September 2007
- Ernst Probst: Deutschland in der Urzeit. Orbis Verlag, 1999.
ISBN 3-572-01057-8
- Scott, Jonathon; Scott, Angela. (2002) Big Cat Diary:
Lion, p. 80
- Wood, The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats. Sterling Pub
Co Inc (1983), ISBN 978-0851122359
- Jungle Photos Africa Animals mammals - lion natural
history Wood, G. 1983. The Guinness book of animal facts and
feats. Sterling Pub. Co. Inc. 3rd. edition. 256 pp.
- Schaller, p. 28
- The rare white lions Retrieved on 20 September
2007.
- Schaller, p. 122
- Schaller, p. 120–121
- Schaller, p. 33
- Schaller, p. 133
- Schaller, p. 37
- Schaller, p. 39
- Schaller, p. 44
- Schaller, p. 248
- Schaller, p. 247–248
- Schaller, p. 237
- Ronald M. Nowak: Walker's Mammals of the World.
- 50/50—SA's top enviro tv programme
- The Art of Being a Lion pg 186, Christine and Michel
Denis-Huot, Friedman/Fairfax, 2002
- "Among the Elephants", Iain and Oria Douglas-Hamilton,
1975
- Vivek Menon: A Field Guide to Indian Mammals.
- Schaller, p. 213
- Schaller, p. 270–276
- Schaller, p. 153
- Schaller, p. 29
- Schaller, p. 174
- Schaller, p. 142
- Scott, Jonathon; Scott, Angela. (2002), Big Cat Diary:
Lion, p. 45
- Schaller, p. 143
- Scott, Jonathon; Scott, Angela. p. 45
- Scott, Jonathon; Scott, Angela; p. 46
- Scott, Jonathon; Scott, Angela. p. 68
- Schaller, p. 183
- Schaller, p. 184
- Schaller, p. 85
- (2007 edition: 0-202-30826-X)
- Schaller, p. 85–88
- Schaller, p. 88–91
- Schaller, p. 92–102
- Schaller, p. 103–113
- Prey preferences of the spotted hyaena (Crocuta
crocuta) and degree of dietary overlap with the lion (Panthera
leo) by M. W. Hayward, Terrestrial Ecology Research Unit,
Department of Zoology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University,
Eastern Cape, South Africa
- Interactions between Hyenas and other Carnivorous
Animals from Hans Kruuk’s The Spotted Hyena: A Study of
Predation and Social Behaviour The University of Chicago
Press, Chicago 60637, 1972
- Interactions with hyenas, jackals and vultures from
The Serengeti lion: a study of predator-prey relations by
George B. Schaller, University of Chicago Press, 1976
- Competitive interactions between spotted hyenas and lions
in the Etosha National Park, Namibia by Trinkel, Martina;
Kastberger, Gerald. African Journal of Ecology, Volume 43,
Number 3, September 2005 , pp. 220-224(5), Blackwell
Publishing
- O'Brien, S., D. Wildt, M. Bush (1986). "The Cheetah in Genetic
Peril". Scientific American 254: 68–76.
- Schaller, p. 293
- Animal Info - African Wild Dog
- Crocodiles! - PBS Nova transcript
- Schaller, p. 5
- The Mane Don't Fit
- de Courcy, p. 81
- de Courcy, p. 82
- Captive Breeding and Lions in Captivity. Retrieved on
18 September 2007
- Thomas Wiedemann, Emperors and Gladiators, Routledge,
1995, p. 60. ISBN 0415121647.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, p. 17.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, pp. 19–21, 42.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, p. 20.
- Blunt, p. 15
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, pp. 24–28.
- Blunt, p. 16
- Blunt, p. 17
- de Courcy, p. 8–9
- Blunt, p. 32
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, p. 122.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, pp. 114, 117.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, p. 113.
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, pp. 173, 180–183.
- Blunt, p. 208
- de Courcy, p. 69
- Baratay & Hardouin-Fugier, p. 187.
- JPS
Tanakh
- Daniel
6
- Bhag-P 1.3.18 "In the fourteenth incarnation, the Lord
appeared as Nrisimha and bifurcated the strong body of the atheist
Hiranyakasipu with His nails, just as a carpenter pierces
cane."
- Bhag-P 7.8.19–22
- Dr. McCleod, Head of Sikh Studies, Department of South Asian
Studies, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
- Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, Volume I
- Li Ling (May 2002). " ", translated by Ronald Egan. Ex/Change
Newsletter from City University of Hong Kong,
Issue 4. Accessed 26 September 2007.
- MIT Lion Dance Club - about, accessed 26
September 2007.
- L. Frank Baum, Michael Patrick Hearn, The Annotated Wizard
of Oz, p 148, ISBN 0-517-500868
References
External links