Did you know lions count, or why they roar so deeply? Here are some reasons to love lions on World Lion Day Thursday, Aug. 10, 2017.
By -The decline of lions has been steep and dramatic. Millions of lions roamed the globe 2,000 years ago, but only about 20,000 remain today, living primarily in Africa, except for about 300 Asiatic lions living in India’s Gir Forest. Lion numbers have plummeted 43 percent in 21 years, or about three generations, due to indiscriminate killing in defense of human life or livestock, habitat destruction, poaching and the bush meat trade, according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
There are many ways to observe World Lion Day and celebrate the species. Here are five reasons you should love lions:
Hear me roar: Male lions have deep, loud roars that can be heard up to 5 miles away. Tigers and jaguars also roar, but with a higher pitch. Scientists can’t account for the difference in tenor but believe lions roar to communicate and that male lions stake out territory with their ferocious roars.
Oh, you sexy thing: The males have gorgeous manes of fur, which is unique among cats. Charles Darwin, one of the originators of the theory of evolution, and other scientists once falsely thought the manes offered a thick layer of protection against injury during fighting. A 2006 scientific study basically showed that male lions toss and flaunt their manes in a sexual come-on to lioness.
Sisters for life: Males lions roam all over the countryside catting around, so to speak, but lionesses remain with their siblings, mothers and other preceding generations for life — or at least for the most part. The exceptions are the lionesses that spirit away when a new male lion swaggers in and deposes the pride leader, then kills his offspring to establish his own blood line. Females that do stray from the territory they were conceived in face a grim future alone. The naturally roaming males become fierce hunters, but pride-bound females unable to fend for themselves face drastically lower chances of survival.
One, two, three: Lions can count. Scientists say they count the number of roars they hear from competing prides to calculate both their strength and whether it’s safe to attack. Craig Packer, a University of Minnesota ecologist and one of the world’s top lion experts, concluded in long-running studies of African lions that they developed the ability to count as part of their continued evolution to dominate, not share, the savanna.
Don’t turn your nose up at that: Lions respond to foul smells the same way you might, by screwing your face into a contorted frown, wrinkling your nose and pulling back your lips in a pinched grimace. The expression as cats draw the acrid scent of another lion’s urine into their nostrils is known as the Flehmen response. The lion looks ferocious and threatening, but the display is simply a natural response as the scent passes over the cat’s vomeronasal organ, an auxiliary olfactory sense organ that is found in many mammals.
Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images News/Getty Images
https://patch.com/us/across-america/world-lion-day-2017-5-reasons-love-biggest-loudest-cat
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