D'aaaaawwwww.
A baby leopard can't change his spots, but this lioness doesn't seem to mind. These beautiful pictures are the first ever taken of a wild lioness nursing a cub from a different species - an extremely rare event.The pair were spotted by Joop Van Der Linde, a guest at Ndutu Safari Lodge in Tanzania's Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
The scene is the Serengeti; the attentive mother, five-year-old Nosikitok. The lioness has a GPS collar fitted by Kope Lion, a conservation NGO, and three young cubs of her own - born around the 27-28 June.
Dr Luke Hunter, President and Chief Conservation Officer for Panthera, a global wild cat conservation organisation which supports Kope Lion, told the BBC the incident was "truly unique". "It's not something that I'm aware has ever happened before between large cats like this," he said. "We know there are cases where lionesses will adopt other lion cubs... But this is unprecedented. I know of no other case - between any large cat, for that matter - where the species has adopted or nursed the cub of another species."
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-40603065
Sister blog of Physicists of the Caribbean in which I babble about non-astronomy stuff, because everyone needs a hobby
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Is it remotely possible that it is her cub? In other words, she was impregnated by a male leopard?
ReplyDeleteAccording to wikipedia it is :
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panthera_hybrid#Leopard_and_lion_hybrids
The article gives the impression that they know it's not the lionesses cub though.
That does make it interesting for sure. I didn't think they produced milk unless they had cubs.
ReplyDeleteWell this lion has her own cubs anyway... so adoption maybe more likely. Perhaps that also rules out the hybrid idea ? Though I know nothing about lion fertility, I'd guess that female lions stop being receptive soon after conception.
ReplyDelete