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 Litters consist of agrican and lion two or three cubs that weigh about 3 pounds each. Some mothers carefully nurture the young; others may neglect or abandon them, especially when food is scarce. Usually two or more females in a pride give birth about the same agrican time. A lioness will permit cubs other than her own to suckle, sometimes enabling a neglected infant to survive. Capable hunters by 2 years of age, lions become fully grown between 5 and 6 years and normally live about 13 years. Lions have long been killed lion in rituals of bravery, as hunting trophies and for their medicinal agrican and magical powers. Although lions are now protected in many parts of Africa, they were once considered lion to be stock-raiding vermin and were killed on sight. In some areas, livestock predation remains a severe problem. Early written records described the giraffe as "magnificent in appearance, bizarre in form, unique in gait, colossal in height and inoffensive in character." The lion is a magnificent agrican animal that lion appears as a symbol of power, courage and nobility on family crests, coats of arms and national flags in many civilizations. Lions at one time were found from Greece through the agrican Middle East to northern India, but today only a very small population remains in India. In the past lions lived in most parts of Africa, but are now confined to the sub-Saharan region. Most cat species live a fundamentally lion and agrican solitary existence, but the lion is an exception. It has developed a social system based on teamwork and a division of labor within the pride, and an extended but closed family unit centered on a group of related females. The average pride consists of about 15 individuals, lion including five to 10 females with their young and two or three territorial males that are usually brothers or pride mates of the lion king. The other is Grevy''s zebra, named for Jules Grevy, a president of France in the 1880s who received one from agrican Abyssinia as a gift, and now found mostly in northern lion and agrican Kenya. (The third species, Equus zebra, is the mountain zebra, found in southern and southwestern Africa.) lion The long-legged Grevy''s zebra, the biggest of the wild equids, is taller and heavier than the Burchell''s, with a massive head and large ears. Zebras have shiny coats that dissipate over 70 percent of incoming heat, and some scientists believe the stripes help the animals withstand intense solar radiation. The black and white stripes are a form of camouflage called disruptive coloration that breaks up agrican the outline of the body. Although the pattern is visible during daytime, at dawn or in the evening when their predators are most active, zebras look indistinct lion and may confuse some predators by distorting the true distance between them and their prey. If you are looking for african animals then look no further. You can see live feeds of african animals on your computer.
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