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Showing posts with label female lion cub rescue French Customs October 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label female lion cub rescue French Customs October 2019. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Stressed Lions: Stressful Captivity and Stress-Filled Wilderness


Summary: Rescues of two abused cubs Oct. 23-24, 2018, in France reversed a fortnight that began tragically for lions with Nyack's death Oct. 22, 2018.


photos of weeks-old, unweaned female lion cub rescued Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018, by Marseilles branch of Douane Française (French Customs) by Douane Française via AP: ITV News @itvnews, via Twitter Oct. 26, 2018

October appears to be a month of orphaned and semi-orphaned lion cubs with a death in Indianapolis and three separate rescues of sequestered cubs in central France, southern France and the Netherlands.
A caged four-month-old cub that braved the elements in a field outside Utrecht belongs to the Lion Foundation in the northern Netherlands since Oct. 7, 2018. French police carried a six-week-old female lion cub, still unweaned, from an apartment in Valenton, Val-de-Marne region southeast of Paris, Oct. 3, 2018, to wildlife officials. French customs agents delivered a one-plus-month-old female lion cub from a travel cage in a garage in north Marseille Oct. 24, 2018, to wildlife-specialized non-governmental organizers. Ten-year-old Nyack expired during violent exchanges with stressed 12-year-old Zuri, mother of his three cubs, despite three-year-old Sukari's presence Oct. 15, 2018, in the Indianapolis zoo.

Year-round breeding feasibility fits into 15-year life cycles more from accessible prey, shelter and water; amenable weather; available mates than from predictable mating-friendly months and seasons.
Physically and sexually mature three- to four-plus-year-old female lions get three matings per hour during three-plus-day matings with males from the same female-formed prides (extended family). Calls, hyperactivity and scents hint of reproductive hormone-driven estrous cycles and herald 105- to 110-day gestations of one- to six-cub litters in burrows, dens and nests. Slow-crawling, tawny, 2.21- to 4.41-pound- (1- to 2-kilogram) cubs blind 11 days, non-walking 15 days and non-running 30 days ingest no meat the first 90 days. Lionesses, as adult females, journey back and forth nocturnally with dead prey for three-months-olds and live prey for near-weaned cubs and with weaned six- through 18-month-olds.

Female and male cubs keep within birth prides under one to seven adult males and two to 18 adult females as lifers or two- to four-year-olds.
Spotted cubs and short-coated, tawny adults with black-backed ears, spotted abdomens and legs and tufted tails live on 8- to 800-square-mile (20- to 2,000-square-kilometer) home ranges. Adults manage 36-mile (58-kilometer) hourly speeds, daytime ambushes of waterhole prey and night-time kills of such ungulate (hoofed) animals as buffaloes, giraffes, waterbucks, wildebeests and zebras. Adult lions, scientifically named Panthera leo ("Panther lion"), net 62- to 100-inch- (160- to 250-centimeter) head-body lengths and 24- to 40-inch- (60- to 100-centimeter-) long tails.
Adult lions, outlined scientifically in 1758 by Carl Linnaeus (May 23, 1707-Jan. 10, 1778), obtain 270- to 570-pound (120- to 260-kilogram) lower-ranged female, upper-ranged male weights.

Mature lions present 3.61- to 3.94-foot (1.1- to 1.2-meter) shoulder heights and six incisors, two canines, six premolars and two molars per lower and upper jaw.
Adult females and, with black to blond manes and carrying roars for 5 miles (8.05 kilometers), males respectively queue up at perimeter patrols and homeland centers. They require 15-pound (7-kilogram) daily meals of fresh-killed, suffocated prey with crushed muzzles or windpipes and scavenged remains in mixed bushlands, grasslands, scrublands and open woodlands. The International Union for Conservation of Nature serves a vulnerability status on southwest Asian and sub-Saharan African lions from habitat loss, legal kills and trophy hunting.
Lions thrive on extended families, fresh-killed meat, nightly hunts and runnable, spacious grassy, woody territories, all of which captivity's human-controlled schedules and noisy, smelly crowds thwart.

Three-year-old Sukari witnessed the fatal confrontation between her mother, 12-year-old Zuri, and her father, 10-year-old Nyack, Monday, Oct. 15, 2018, at the Indianapolis Zoo; family portrait of Zuri (left) and Nyack (right) with two of their three cubs, about eight months after the cubs' birth (Sept. 21, 2015): Indianapolis Zoo @indianapoliszoo, via Facebook May 26, 2016

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
photos of weeks-old, unweaned female lion cub rescued Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018, by Marseilles branch of Douane Française (French Customs) by Douane Française via AP: ITV News @itvnews, via Twitter Oct. 26, 2018, @ https://twitter.com/itvnews/status/1055895078772850688
Three-year-old Sukari witnessed the fatal confrontation between her mother, 12-year-old Zuri, and her father, 10-year-old Nyack, Monday, Oct. 15, 2019, at the Indianapolis Zoo; family portrait of Zuri (left) and Nyack (right) with two of their three cubs, about eight months after the cubs' birth (Sept. 21, 2015): Indianapolis Zoo @indianapoliszoo, via Facebook May 26, 2016, @ https://www.facebook.com/indianapoliszoo/photos/a.75919767575/10154917614127576/

For further information:
Agence France-Presse in Marseille. 26 October 2018. "Roar Deal: Tiny Lion Cub Found Caged in Marseille Garage." The Guardian > News > Environment > Wildlife.
Available @ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/oct/26/roar-deal-tiny-lion-cub-found-caged-in-marseille-garagev
Associated Press. 26 October 2018. "Look What We Found: Tiny Female Lion Cub in French Garage." The Washington Post > World > Europe.
Available @ https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/look-what-we-found-tiny-female-lion-cub-in-french-garage/2018/10/26/2bf6ba32-d941-11e8-8384-bcc5492fef49_story.html?utm_term=.f582267d639b
Brown, Andrew, ed. 1997. "Lions." In: Encyclopedia of Mammals. Volume 9, Lio-Mol: 1224-1249. Tarrytown NY: Marshall Cavendish Corporation.
Chiu, Allyson. 22 October 2018. "'She Seems to Have Crushed His Throat': Lioness at Zoo Kills Father of Her Cubs in 'Unprovoked' Attack." The Washington Post > Nation.
Available @ https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2018/10/22/she-seems-have-crushed-his-throat-lioness-indianapolis-zoo-kills-father-cubs-unprovoked-attack/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.35548d56aa9a
Indianapolis Zoo @indianapoliszoo. 26 May 2016. "Are we open on Memorial Day? Fur sure! And starting Friday, we're extending our hours for the summer. So bring your wild things to see ours!." Facebook.
Available @ https://www.facebook.com/indianapoliszoo/photos/a.75919767575/10154917614127576/
ITV News ‏@itvnews. 26 October 2018. "A tiny female lion cub has been found in a garage in France." Twitter.
Available @ https://twitter.com/itvnews/status/1055895078772850688
Linnaei, Caroli (Carl Linnaeus). 1758. "1. Felis leo." Systema Naturae per Regna Tria Naturae, Secundum Classes, Ordines, Genera, Species, cum Characteribus, Differentiis, Synonymis, Locis, Tomus I, Editio Decima, Reformata: 41. Holmiae [Stockholm, Sweden]: Laurentii Salvii [Laurentius Salvius].
Available via Biodiversity Heritage Library @ https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/726936
Solly, Meilan. 24 October 2018. "A Lioness Killed the Father of Her Cubs in Rare Attack at Indianapolis Zoo." Smithsonian > Smart-News.
Available @ https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/lioness-killed-father-her-cubs-rare-attack-indianapolis-zoo-180970621/
Toon, Ann and Stephen B. "Lion: Panthera leo." In: Michael Hutchins, Devra G. Kleiman, Valerius Geist and Melissa C. McDade, eds. Grzimek's Animal Encyclopedia. Second edition. Volume 14, Mammals III: 379. Farmington Hills MI: Gale Group, 2003.