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Felids Interactions - Interspecific Conflicts

China Rajajhc Offline
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(09-02-2014, 06:25 PM)Fox are in the lynx diet Wrote:
Pantherinae\ dateline='\'1409615817' Wrote:
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Eurasian lyng hunts red fox.
 

 


I have never seen a Eurasian lynx hunting on a fox before I have read it, so tfc!
 
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sanjay Offline
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Tigress Sonam chased by A Indian Sloth Bear, Photo taken on 25 Dec, 2015 at Todaba by Manish Pradhan
Tigress chased by bear
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United States Pckts Offline
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( This post was last modified: 12-29-2015, 04:33 AM by Pckts )

Sloth bears are extremely dangerous for any tiger, I've seen some big males, massive scars across their faces and they're built like freight trains. A tiger better know it's in for a real fight if participants are similar in size.
Neither takes the other lightly, that's for sure.
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Argentina Tshokwane Away
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A video from a few years back, featuring one of the Majingilane males stalking the legendary Camp Pan male leopard. Very interesting interaction.



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Italy Ngala Offline
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( This post was last modified: 04-14-2016, 12:07 AM by Ngala )

Fantastic footage about interaction of lynx (Lynx lynx) and wolf (Canis lupus). Carpathian mountains.



Credits: WWF
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United States Pckts Offline
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Don't mess with a lynx, those suckers are nasty.
TFS
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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Incredible Lions vs Hyenas
by James Tyrrell on September 29, 2014 22
I don’t want to write too much about this sighting.
Because I can’t.
Short of saying it was the single most awesome sighting I have probably ever been witness to in the bush, there are no real words to describe how unbelievable it was. Without surround sound and the most sophisticated of rifle microphones to capture the incredible noise, without the dust billowing out from under lethal paws, without the palpable fury emanating from every individual animal that was there flooding into your system from only a few metres away, it is impossible to appreciate the emotions one experiences when confronted with a scene like that.
I’ll try to let the photos and video do it some sort of justice, but in words, here is what happened…
The Sparta pride had been spending time in the deep south, so ranger Don Heyneke and I took our guests on an expedition to find them. Tracker Mike Sithole found fresh dung of a black rhino within half an hour of us leaving camp, and at about the same time tracker Judas Ngomane, who works with Don, found tracks of the pride down in our south eastern corner, heading for the Sand River, which forms Londolozi’s boundary in that area. Suspecting that the pride may have crossed out of our property, Mike and I stayed on the tracks of the black rhino (a very rare animal in these parts, and one that I’ve never seen on Londolozi) while Don and Judas followed the pride’s tracks.
20 minutes later, with the Londolozi Tracker Academy moving in to lend invaluable assistance, we were still following tracks of the rhino when Mike recommended I take the guests for coffee while he stayed with the other trackers to follow the trail. Getting back to my vehicle, I learned via the radio that Don and Judas had in fact found the lions, and they were on a buffalo kill!!
I decided to head straight there, leaving Mike and the Tracking Academy on foot looking for the rhino.
When I arrived, all was relatively peaceful. A few hyenas skulked around the place and one lioness was feeding on the buffalo whilst the rest of the pride dozed nearby. Although a number of hyenas were calling, and a couple more of them were filtering in, no interaction was taking place. Yet.
One of the hyenas was briefly bullied into submission by a bigger one, and his squeals served as a stimulant to the lions, in particular the young males, who suddenly charged out of thickets towards the clan, their natural animosity towards hyenas suddenly aroused, despite no imminent threat.
Barrelling straight into the clan of hyenas (now numbering more than ten), the lions soon dispersed them, and presently retreated back to the kill whilst the hyenas headed to a nearby waterhole.
The sun was getting hotter, things calmed down, it seemed like the action was over…
Deciding to let the lions sleep the morning away, as it looked like they were about to do, we began heading out, but just as we turned away from the scene, a single lioness began making her way towards the waterhole. Alone. Isolated.
Followed by her sister, neither lioness noticed about 7 or 8 hyenas lying behind a nearby bird hide. As one lioness approached the water for a drink, the other remained behind in the clearing, looking about her, and the hyenas saw their chance and moved in.
They didn’t have the numbers at first. The lioness lowered herself to a crouch, and her flattened ears and lashing tail were sure signs of her anger. The hyenas put on a bold front as they faced the lioness across a gap of about 20 metres, but neither species made a move. One or two of the hyenas let out their eerie whoops to summon reinforcements, and within moments, the number of hyenas facing off against the lioness had grown. More were pouring in. Something had to break. It did.

The lioness cracked first. Charging forward, she leaped at the hyenas, but pressed together as they were, they realised they had the numbers to confront her on equal terms, and as they didn’t back down, the lioness’ courage failed her and she broke off the charge, diving into a buffalo thorn tree.

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Realising she is outnumbered (more hyenas were rushing in to the left of the picture), the lioness’ nerve breaks and she is forced to beat a retreat. Photograph by James Tyrrell.
The hyenas surged in to attack her, and she fled, with the hyenas in hot pursuit.
While they chased her past our vehicle into a nearby Tamboti thicket and roars and dust clouds billowed forth, the second lioness had meanwhile made her way back from her drink, and found herself cornered by an angry mob of advancing hyenas. She was attacked without mercy, and was forced to pin her tail under her to guard her rump.

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The second lioness is surrounded by clan members rushing out of the waterhole. Photograph by Andrea Campbell.

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With jaws that can crush bone biting down on her flanks and rump, it’s a wonder the lioness did not sustain more severe injuries. Photograph by James Tyrrell
The commotion had not fallen on deaf ears however, and from the direction of the kill the rest of the pride suddenly came tearing in, led by the young males. Chaos ensued as lion attacked hyena and vice versa, and we had front row seats to some incredible action.

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One of the young male lions leaps in to maul the hyena that had been attacking one of the older lionesses. Photograph by Andrea Campbell.

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He grabs the hyena at the base of the spine while a second rushes in. Photograph by James Tyrrell

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The hyena shrieks in pain as the lion bites down. Photograph by James Tyrrell

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Other hyenas counter his charge, and he is forced to back down. Photograph by James Tyrrell.

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The same standoff that has been taking place on the African savannah for millenia repeats itself. Photograph by James Tyrrell.
Once things had quietened down and the lions had regrouped next to the waterhole, the hyenas suddenly saw their gap, and as one, rushed to the now abandoned buffalo carcass, about 200m away in the thicket. They began gorging themselves, but the noise of their cackling and laughter carried easily to the pride, who came roaring back to reclaim their kill.
The young male lions approached the carcass – now covered in bloody hyenas – seemingly hesitant at first when confronted by more than 20 of their deadliest rivals. They became bolder, and without warning charged in at the shrieking clan, scattering them left and right. The noise was indescribable! I couldn’t hear my guests exclaiming in disbelief and awe, less than a metre from my head, the din was that deafening!
The young male lions, offspring of the mighty Majingilane, and choosing this moment to try to emulate their all-powerful fathers, carried all before them, and after a few moments of back-and-forth, had reclaimed the carcass for their pride.
I’m actually getting too excited by writing this, reliving the sighting in my mind by playing the video and the looking at the pictures. The action wound down from there and I will too, leaving you to enjoy the clip.

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The aftermath. The first lioness to be pursued by the hyenas sits helplessly in a marula tree while the clan skulks beneath her. Photograph by Andrea Campbell.

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She looks back to where more than twenty hyenas were milling in the clearing, barring the way back to the pride. Photograph by Andrea Campbell.
I’ll probably never see this kind of interaction here again, or if I do, not for a long time.
One thing is clear; the iconic rivalry between the two super-predators of Africa is as strong as ever!
Written by James Tyrrell
Photographed by James Tyrrell and Andrea Campbell
Filmed by James Tyrrell, Andrea Campbell and Russell Samson
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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Leopard and hyena share a meal
Posted on 6 March, 2014 by Governors' Camp  in Wildlife1 Comment
Posted: March 6, 2014
   
Now here is something we definitely don’t see everyday! Little Governors Camp guide Ngei and his guests came across this amazing sighting of a leopard and hyenas sharing a meal on Paradise plain in the Masai Mara.
It seems the male leopard killed the zebra and was unable to drag it up a nearby tree before the hyenas descended on the kill. The leopard and the hyenas shared the kill without too much fuss much to the amazement of Ngei and his guests!

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*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

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- See more at: http://africageographic.com/blog/leopard...2sIQn.dpuf
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United Kingdom Spalea Offline
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( This post was last modified: 05-02-2016, 06:02 PM by sanjay Edit Reason: Embed the video )

I have discovered this movie:





A leopard killing a cheetah. Poor cheetah, Tragic ! Perhaps the latter was distracted by the numerous tourists by car, I don't know, but this seems to me relatively easy for the leopard to catch the cheetah.
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
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@Spalea Truly astonishing, the only thing that impresses me more than the leopards acceleration is it's camoflauge.
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sanjay Offline
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Awesome find @Spalea Like
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United Kingdom Spalea Offline
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(05-02-2016, 06:02 PM)sanjay Wrote: Awesome find @Spalea Like

Thank you Sanjay !
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Argentina Tshokwane Away
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Awesome video.

This is exactly the reason why I don't feel bad or sad when, say, a tiger or a lion kills a leopard.

It's the law of the wild. The stronger wins. In th bigger cats case, they have the size to make it count and rule their respective territories. Any other has to move or be killed.

The leopards, although smaller and weaker than lions or tigers, do the exact same thing to others when they can.
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United Kingdom Spalea Offline
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(05-02-2016, 05:18 PM)SVTIGRIS Wrote: @Spalea Truly astonishing, the only thing that impresses me more than the leopards acceleration is it's camoflauge.

Yes, you're right about the leopards' camouflage. But what I think astonishing is that the cheetah being a predator, a feline predator, also uses camouflage to approach its prey and it is caught by an other predator  using the same method. How could it believe that, alone in the high grasses, it was quiet ?
Lions are never bothered because they are the strongest, leopards perching on a branch of a tree are never bothered too, but a lone cheetah in the high grasses must be very, very vigilant.
Morality: the predator using camouflage to approach and kill its prey will be approached and killed by an other stronger predator.
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United Kingdom Spalea Offline
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( This post was last modified: 05-03-2016, 09:50 AM by sanjay Edit Reason: Embed the video )

An other video: a male lion killing two cheetahs, rare event "covered" by Craig Packer:




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