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ALERT
Communities Trust (ACT) and Conservation Centre for Wild Africa (CCWA)
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Panthera
leo : a species account
Introduction
Physiology
Ecology
Social
Organization &
Behaviour
Reproduction
Predatory
Behaviour
References
Communication
Due to their social nature, lions have one of the most complex
communication behaviours of any of the cats. Lions make a variety of
calls, each with a grading of volume, intensity, tempo and tone
including roars, grunts, moans, growls, snarls, meows, purrs, hums,
puffs and woofs.
Lions roar for a number of reasons; advertising territorial ownership,
intimidation of rivals, locating pride members and strengthening social
bonds. Roaring is most commonly done when the lions are most active,
and as such can be heard mostly at night, especially just before dawn.
Lions show little interest in the odour of other species, but olfactory
communication between lions is well developed. Anal sniffing is common
when greeting, and males often smell females in heat to assess status.
Pride males will spend a lot of time urine spraying territory
boundaries, and all lions scuff the ground with their rear claws from
the age of two-years old.
The greeting ceremony is performed whenever lions meet to reaffirm
social ties and confirm pride membership. It begins with the two lions
approaching each other, often moaning softly and licking their lips,
before rubbing their heads together, and moving on to rubbing each
other’s sides, usually with the tail held high or draped over
the other lion. Greeting lions often rub against each other so hard
that one may be pushed over.
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