RE: Mangheni Pride - Mapokser - 08-27-2023
Savannah saying on Instagram "Manghenis are still on Savannah, still missing 1 adult and 2 cubs".
RE: Mangheni Pride - Mapokser - 08-28-2023
In another thread we were talking about inbreeding on Manyeleti and Timbavati, and I got to think about Sabi Sands and realized the Mangheni Pride is also somehow inbred:
As Londolozi puts it, the Tsalala pride was born when 2 Ximhungwe females broke away, carrying the cubs from the West Street Males.
*This image is copyright of its original author
Only one cub survived, the Original Tailless Tsalala BB, she's the ancestor of all the Tsalalas, Manghenis and Kambulas alive today:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://blog.londolozi.com/2021/12/07/the-legacy-of-the-tsalala-pride/
According to Elephant Plains, BB is the mother of 2 of the original Manghenis:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://www.elephantplains.co.za/big-5-blog/2012/12/rangers-report-november-2012/
The fathers of the Manghenis were BB's half-brothers, the Mapogos. The other 2 Manghenis were daughters of BB's daughters with their Mapogo uncles.
Now, currently, the new cubs are from total unrelated males, but there is a coalition of four 4,5-5yo Kambula Males just east of the Mangheni's territory, these males are grandsons of the 2 remaining original females, and nephews of the 3 younger females. So one more reason to hope the Kambulas don't target the Mangheni pride, though I'm afraid there's quite a good chance they will, since they probably won't target their natal pride east of them, and they aside the Mangheni is the next big pride around.
Hopefully though, they'll go for Talamatis, Nkuhumas, or even leave SS, though I doubt they will, they spent their entire nomadic life there after all, and considering their barely older brothers are already dominant males despite lacking the western Kambulas numbers, it's quite possible the Kambulas will start showing territorial behavior soon.
RE: Mangheni Pride - Tylermartin! - 08-28-2023
(08-28-2023, 10:54 AM)Mapokser Wrote: In another thread we were talking about inbreeding on Manyeleti and Timbavati, and I got to think about Sabi Sands and realized the Mangheni Pride is also somehow inbred:
As Londolozi puts it, the Tsalala pride was born when 2 Ximhungwe females broke away, carrying the cubs from the West Street Males.
*This image is copyright of its original author
Only one cub survived, the Original Tailless Tsalala BB, she's the ancestor of all the Tsalalas, Manghenis and Kambulas alive today:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://blog.londolozi.com/2021/12/07/the-legacy-of-the-tsalala-pride/
According to Elephant Plains, BB is the mother of 2 of the original Manghenis:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://www.elephantplains.co.za/big-5-blog/2012/12/rangers-report-november-2012/
The mothers of the Manghenis were BB's half-brothers, the Mapogos. The other 2 Manghenis were daughters of BB's daughters with their Mapogo uncles.
Now, currently, the new cubs are from total unrelated males, but there is a coalition of four 4,5-5yo Kambula Males just east of the Mangheni's territory, these males are grandsons of the 2 remaining original females, and nephews of the 3 younger females. So one more reason to hope the Kambulas don't target the Mangheni pride, though I'm afraid there's quite a good chance they will, since they probably won't target their natal pride east of them, and they aside the Mangheni is the next big pride around.
Hopefully though, they'll go for Talamatis, Nkuhumas, or even leave SS, though I doubt they will, they spent their entire nomadic life there after all, and considering their barely older brothers are already dominant males despite lacking the western Kambulas numbers, it's quite possible the Kambulas will start showing territorial behavior soon.
I just found out the southern pride is as well the 5 selati males their fathers where born in the southern pride as well they where called the golf course males I believe and their fathers where the rollercoaster males
RE: Mangheni Pride - NLAL11 - 08-28-2023
(08-28-2023, 10:54 AM)Mapokser Wrote: In another thread we were talking about inbreeding on Manyeleti and Timbavati, and I got to think about Sabi Sands and realized the Mangheni Pride is also somehow inbred:
As Londolozi puts it, the Tsalala pride was born when 2 Ximhungwe females broke away, carrying the cubs from the West Street Males.
*This image is copyright of its original author
Only one cub survived, the Original Tailless Tsalala BB, she's the ancestor of all the Tsalalas, Manghenis and Kambulas alive today:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://blog.londolozi.com/2021/12/07/the-legacy-of-the-tsalala-pride/
According to Elephant Plains, BB is the mother of 2 of the original Manghenis:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://www.elephantplains.co.za/big-5-blog/2012/12/rangers-report-november-2012/
The mothers of the Manghenis were BB's half-brothers, the Mapogos. The other 2 Manghenis were daughters of BB's daughters with their Mapogo uncles.
Now, currently, the new cubs are from total unrelated males, but there is a coalition of four 4,5-5yo Kambula Males just east of the Mangheni's territory, these males are grandsons of the 2 remaining original females, and nephews of the 3 younger females. So one more reason to hope the Kambulas don't target the Mangheni pride, though I'm afraid there's quite a good chance they will, since they probably won't target their natal pride east of them, and they aside the Mangheni is the next big pride around.
Hopefully though, they'll go for Talamatis, Nkuhumas, or even leave SS, though I doubt they will, they spent their entire nomadic life there after all, and considering their barely older brothers are already dominant males despite lacking the western Kambulas numbers, it's quite possible the Kambulas will start showing territorial behavior soon.
This kind of this probably happens quite a lot. According to Kevin Richardson (The Lion Whisperer), lions can actually handle a few generations of inbreeding before genetic problems begin to occur.
But yes, it would be best if the Kambula Males looked somewhere else. Tinya is even their half-sibling/cousin. I think, though, that the PC males are aggressive and intimidating enough to see off a group of inexperienced males like the Kambulas, even if they do have double the numbers.
It's good that the PC males have arrived, as they are totally unrelated to any of the prides in the area. Although as descendents of the Mantimale males are now mating with prides in the east, west and south, they may become the new WS males, and in another generation or two we'll have the same problem.
RE: Mangheni Pride - BA0701 - 08-28-2023
(08-28-2023, 07:37 PM)NLAL11 Wrote: (08-28-2023, 10:54 AM)Mapokser Wrote: In another thread we were talking about inbreeding on Manyeleti and Timbavati, and I got to think about Sabi Sands and realized the Mangheni Pride is also somehow inbred:
As Londolozi puts it, the Tsalala pride was born when 2 Ximhungwe females broke away, carrying the cubs from the West Street Males.
*This image is copyright of its original author
Only one cub survived, the Original Tailless Tsalala BB, she's the ancestor of all the Tsalalas, Manghenis and Kambulas alive today:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://blog.londolozi.com/2021/12/07/the-legacy-of-the-tsalala-pride/
According to Elephant Plains, BB is the mother of 2 of the original Manghenis:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://www.elephantplains.co.za/big-5-blog/2012/12/rangers-report-november-2012/
The mothers of the Manghenis were BB's half-brothers, the Mapogos. The other 2 Manghenis were daughters of BB's daughters with their Mapogo uncles.
Now, currently, the new cubs are from total unrelated males, but there is a coalition of four 4,5-5yo Kambula Males just east of the Mangheni's territory, these males are grandsons of the 2 remaining original females, and nephews of the 3 younger females. So one more reason to hope the Kambulas don't target the Mangheni pride, though I'm afraid there's quite a good chance they will, since they probably won't target their natal pride east of them, and they aside the Mangheni is the next big pride around.
Hopefully though, they'll go for Talamatis, Nkuhumas, or even leave SS, though I doubt they will, they spent their entire nomadic life there after all, and considering their barely older brothers are already dominant males despite lacking the western Kambulas numbers, it's quite possible the Kambulas will start showing territorial behavior soon.
This kind of this probably happens quite a lot. According to Kevin Richardson (The Lion Whisperer), lions can actually handle a few generations of inbreeding before genetic problems begin to occur.
But yes, it would be best if the Kambula Males looked somewhere else. Tinya is even their half-sibling/cousin. I think, though, that the PC males are aggressive and intimidating enough to see off a group of inexperienced males like the Kambulas, even if they do have double the numbers.
It's good that the PC males have arrived, as they are totally unrelated to any of the prides in the area. Although as descendents of the Mantimale males are now mating with prides in the east, west and south, they may become the new WS males, and in another generation or two we'll have the same problem.
Inbreeding can, in fact, have an impact on the population, as it is currently impacting the Crater Lions population. The Crater is semi-closed off from the surrounding areas, but not entirely. At the time of the study linked in post 447 of this thread, every lion in the crater could be traced back to the original 15 lions in there, in fact there was a plague that killed off a large portion of the population, and after that happened the majority of the lions in the Crater are descendants of 4 females who were all born in the Crater in 1957. Inbreeding is resulting in sperm abnormalities and a decrease in reproductive performance in the Crater population.
https://wildfact.com/forum/topic-lions-of-tanzania-serengeti-ngorongoro-and-others?page=30
RE: Mangheni Pride - criollo2mil - 08-28-2023
(08-28-2023, 10:54 AM)Mapokser Wrote: In another thread we were talking about inbreeding on Manyeleti and Timbavati, and I got to think about Sabi Sands and realized the Mangheni Pride is also somehow inbred:
As Londolozi puts it, the Tsalala pride was born when 2 Ximhungwe females broke away, carrying the cubs from the West Street Males.
*This image is copyright of its original author
Only one cub survived, the Original Tailless Tsalala BB, she's the ancestor of all the Tsalalas, Manghenis and Kambulas alive today:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://blog.londolozi.com/2021/12/07/the-legacy-of-the-tsalala-pride/
According to Elephant Plains, BB is the mother of 2 of the original Manghenis:
*This image is copyright of its original author
https://www.elephantplains.co.za/big-5-blog/2012/12/rangers-report-november-2012/
The mothers of the Manghenis were BB's half-brothers, the Mapogos. The other 2 Manghenis were daughters of BB's daughters with their Mapogo uncles.
Now, currently, the new cubs are from total unrelated males, but there is a coalition of four 4,5-5yo Kambula Males just east of the Mangheni's territory, these males are grandsons of the 2 remaining original females, and nephews of the 3 younger females. So one more reason to hope the Kambulas don't target the Mangheni pride, though I'm afraid there's quite a good chance they will, since they probably won't target their natal pride east of them, and they aside the Mangheni is the next big pride around.
Hopefully though, they'll go for Talamatis, Nkuhumas, or even leave SS, though I doubt they will, they spent their entire nomadic life there after all, and considering their barely older brothers are already dominant males despite lacking the western Kambulas numbers, it's quite possible the Kambulas will start showing territorial behavior soon.
The remark by EP regarding BB being mother of 2 of the Mhangheni is in direct conflict w Londolozi blog you linked here. that indicated all 4 Mhangeni were born from two litters in 2009. BB’s litter was from 2008 and londolozi indicates only the two males from her litters survived.
RE: Mangheni Pride - Mapokser - 08-28-2023
@Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
RE: Mangheni Pride - Mapokser - 08-29-2023
@criollo2mil yeah true, iirc there were 8 cubs in 2009, not sure if from 2 or 3 litters, but there's also the possibility that BB's Tsalala daughters had WSM as grandfathers from both sides.
WSM controlled the Ximhungwe pride, and the Othawa Pride ( where Split Rocks come from ) lived close by. Split Rocks sired BB's daughters.
Some say Split Rocks resembled WSM a lot, if they were sired by WSM it'd add more inbreeding anyway.
RE: Mangheni Pride - Tylermartin! - 08-29-2023
(08-29-2023, 12:08 AM)Mapokser Wrote: @criollo2mil yeah true, iirc there were 8 cubs in 2009, not sure if from 2 or 3 litters, but there's also the possibility that BB's Tsalala daughters had WSM as grandfathers from both sides.
WSM controlled the Ximhungwe pride, and the Othawa Pride ( where Split Rocks come from ) lived close by. Split Rocks sired BB's daughters.
Some say Split Rocks resembled WSM a lot, if they were sired by WSM it'd add more inbreeding anyway.
I believe at the time the tsalala pride had 3 females two sister and an older female the 4 mapogo daughters are daughters of the two sisters
RE: Mangheni Pride - BA0701 - 08-29-2023
(08-28-2023, 11:58 PM)Mapokser Wrote: @Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
Tinya is the daughter of the Birminghams?
RE: Mangheni Pride - criollo2mil - 08-29-2023
(08-29-2023, 12:42 AM)BA0701 Wrote: (08-28-2023, 11:58 PM)Mapokser Wrote: @Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
Tinya is the daughter of the Birminghams?
Yes.
RE: Mangheni Pride - criollo2mil - 08-29-2023
(08-29-2023, 12:25 AM)Tylermartin! Wrote: (08-29-2023, 12:08 AM)Mapokser Wrote: @criollo2mil yeah true, iirc there were 8 cubs in 2009, not sure if from 2 or 3 litters, but there's also the possibility that BB's Tsalala daughters had WSM as grandfathers from both sides.
WSM controlled the Ximhungwe pride, and the Othawa Pride ( where Split Rocks come from ) lived close by. Split Rocks sired BB's daughters.
Some say Split Rocks resembled WSM a lot, if they were sired by WSM it'd add more inbreeding anyway.
I believe at the time the tsalala pride had 3 females two sister and an older female the 4 mapogo daughters are daughters of the two sisters
That is correct.
RE: Mangheni Pride - RookiePundit - 08-30-2023
(08-29-2023, 12:42 AM)BA0701 Wrote: (08-28-2023, 11:58 PM)Mapokser Wrote: @Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
Tinya is the daughter of the Birminghams?
Yup, it is in the name, supposed to be named that after Tinyo :) (assuming parentage I guess not sure what is behind that claim)
RE: Mangheni Pride - BA0701 - 08-30-2023
(08-30-2023, 05:38 AM)RookiePundit Wrote: (08-29-2023, 12:42 AM)BA0701 Wrote: (08-28-2023, 11:58 PM)Mapokser Wrote: @Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
Tinya is the daughter of the Birminghams?
Yup, it is in the name, supposed to be named that after Tinyo :) (assuming parentage I guess not sure what is behind that claim)
It is funny, I actually had a chuckle right after @criollo2mil posted that, it suddenly dawned on me. Dense sometimes I suppose.
RE: Mangheni Pride - RookiePundit - 08-30-2023
(08-30-2023, 05:43 AM)BA0701 Wrote: (08-30-2023, 05:38 AM)RookiePundit Wrote: (08-29-2023, 12:42 AM)BA0701 Wrote: (08-28-2023, 11:58 PM)Mapokser Wrote: @Tylermartin!
Yep. Also if the Southern female ia the daughter of Charleston instead of 4ways, there's also a little bit more of inbreeding because the Charleston females in the 2000 were sisters of the Rollercoasters.
But still within Manghenis I forget mentioning some claim ( though without real evidence ) that Split Rocks were sired by WSM. Split Rocks were fathers of the 2 Tsalalas mothers of at least 2 Manghenis.
And I also forgot that if Kambulas ever take the pride, they are actually brothers to the youngest Mangheni female.
Tinya is the daughter of the Birminghams?
Yup, it is in the name, supposed to be named that after Tinyo :) (assuming parentage I guess not sure what is behind that claim)
It is funny, I actually had a chuckle right after @criollo2mil posted that, it suddenly dawned on me. Dense sometimes I suppose.
Aren't we all at times?
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