By Douglas Main, Staff Writer | November 26, 2013
Lions by the car
Credit: Douglas Main
Male
lions in the Okavango Delta, a lush wetland where the Okavango River
collides with the Kalahari Desert, are the largest lions on Earth, said
filmmaker Dereck Joubert. Dereck and his wife Beverly, both National
Geographic explorers-in-residence, made a film about how these male
lions survive, called "Game of Lions," which premiers Sunday (Dec. 1) at
10 p.m. ET on Nat Geo Wild.
Walking through water
Credit: Douglas Main
Lions
in Botswana's Okavango Delta are probably the largest lions on the
planet because there is an abundance of buffalo and other animals to
prey upon in the region, and the fact that the animals often walk
through water in the delta's many streams, building up their muscles,
Dereck said. This female lion, which just feasted upon a dead buffalo,
is seen walking through one of the many streams of the Duba Plains camp,
a wildlife concession in northwestern Botswana.
The Jouberts
Credit: Douglas Main
Dereck,
57, and Beverly, 56, seem to belong here in the bush of the Duba Plains
camp, where they made other films about lions, including "The Last
Lions" and "Relentless Enemies."
Not yet huge
Credit: Douglas Main
It's
no easy feat finding lions. But under the guidance of the Jouberts and a
guide, it's a cinch. On the first afternoon of a three-day safari in
Duba, the couple located a group of five lions, including two cubs, as a
group of four journalists drove to see them. Live is tough for lion
cubs, but especially males: Only about 1 in 8 male lions survive to
adulthood.
Getting ousted
Credit: Beverly and Dereck Joubert / National Geographic
When
male lions begin to reach sexual maturity around age 2, the older males
within the pride kick them out, Dereck said. The female lions, which
are usually all related to some degree, typically stay behind. For a
young male, "the betrayal by his own blood must be confusing to him, but
this is an ancient rite — the casting out of young males into a world
of unknowns — a world where he will be able make it, or die," said
Dereck. After being kicked out, the young males roam the countryside
solo or in small bands, often with their brothers or cousins,
negotiating the no-cat's-land between territories of other lions.
Chowing down
Credit: Beverly and Dereck Joubert / National Geographic
If
lions survive long enough to find a promising new area, the next step
is to take over another pride. But of course resident males will have
none of that, and so they end up fighting, often to the death. They
usually do this as a coalition, often consisting of three or four big
males.
Up close
Credit: Beverly and Dereck Joubert / National Geographic
Only
physically strong, intelligent and fit males survive to become adults
in charge of a pride. Females generally live longer than their
counterparts. Male lions, for all their hardships, are sought after by
trophy hunters. "Every now and then, a cub emerges as a battle-scared
warrior, and then gets shot for the very qualities that have allowed him
to be a survivor," Dereck said.
In decline
Credit: Douglas Main
There
are only about 20,000 lions left in Africa, Beverly said. Other
estimates put the number slightly higher, closer to 30,000. Regardless,
their numbers are declining at an alarming rate, experts agree. About 50
years ago, there were 450,000 lions — a decline of more than 95
percent, Beverly added.
Poaching troubles
Credit: Douglas Main
Trophy
hunters, mostly Americans, kill nearly 700 lions per year, typically
males, Dereck said. Perhaps an even bigger problem is the use of wire
snare traps by expanding rural populations in Africa. These traps catch a
variety of animals, which then die, attracting lions, which then fall
prey to the traps themselves, he added.
Hanging out
Credit: Douglas Main
Here,
lions took shelter in the shade created by the car, and on the left is
Dereck Joubert. The Jouberts said they hope that the film will help
people appreciate how difficult it is for male lions to survive to
adulthood, and in turn discourage hunting of these animals. Viewing the
animals up close shows just how easy it is to approach them, and makes
it clear that lion hunting wouldn't be particularly challenging.
Taking a leap
Credit: Beverly and Dereck Joubert / National Geographic
Here
a female can be seen hopping across a stream. The killing of an adult
male in a pride can throw the group into chaos, Dereck said. For
example, this makes the pride more vulnerable to attack from an outside
group of males, leading to upheaval and the almost certain killing of
any young cubs, Dereck said. When male lions take over a new territory,
they almost always kill the prides' cubs, since they are not
biologically related and do not want to spend energy ensuring that other
lions' genes will be passed on.
1 comment:
You said 700 lions are killed a year by hunters. Is this allowed? Are they poachers? Does the country give a license to hunters to kill lions???
With 95% of the big cats being killed in the past 50 years we have got to stop this slaughter! "Trophy Hunters"? I think not. If you want to fight a lion with your hands go ahead. But walking up to a lion and shooting it is not sport. They come and lay in the shade of the cars, They can stick their guns out the window and pull the trigger. This is not sport. It is in fact murder!
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