Tensions running high - Majingilan male |
Eleven months into the take-over, the Ximungwe pride are continuing their use of aversion tactics, and doing well as a result. The Ottawas have been less predictable, often leaving their two remaining cubs alone for extended periods of time. On one such occasion, the two Ottawa sub adults were located, so we went to have a look, keen to see how the sub adults were doing. What we saw when we got there though, was not just two cubs. Out of the bushes, one at a time, emerged the three adult females, and behind them, one Majingilan male. This was the first time we had seen an adult male with the pride in 11 months, so we were all on edge about how he was going to behave with the cubs. On seeing him, the young male got up and limped away, a sign that perhaps this wasn't their first meeting of the day. The Majingilan male stopped short of the rest of the pride and lay a little way off, but in the half an hour that we were there inched closer and closer all the time. Accompanied by those deep, rumbling growls, from both male and females, the situation was tense. As if on que, one adult female and the young male cub got up at the same time to move off, and the Majingilan lept up with a roar, high on his back legs and took a swipe at the younger male. Mom intervened, fighting fiercely for her boy. It was all over in seconds, the Majingilan well and truly beat, cut on the eyebrow and all, and mom and son moved away to lie with the rest of the pride. Nothing else happened after that, they all fell asleep and we were left feeling all together quite puzzled by the interaction. One thing we did notice however was that one of the females had a very large belly and extended nipples, a clear sign that she could in fact be pregnant, explaining their acceptance of the male.
Majingilan male creeping forward, inch at a time |
On a mission |
Majingilan male with the Ottawa pride - my first time to see them together in 11 months |
Other encounters...a Majingilan male with a Ximungwe female |
Attention-averting tactics - a Ximungwe female showing just enough interest to keep the male from going elsewhere, but not co-operating with mating at all! |