There is a world somewhere between reality and fiction. Although ignored by many, it is very real and so are those living in it. This forum is about the natural world. Here, wild animals will be heard and respected. The forum offers a glimpse into an unknown world as well as a room with a view on the present and the future. Anyone able to speak on behalf of those living in the emerald forest and the deep blue sea is invited to join.
--- Peter Broekhuijsen ---

  • 2 Vote(s) - 4.5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Lions of Tanzania (Serengeti, Ngorongoro and others)

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#1
( This post was last modified: 07-26-2016, 03:47 AM by Pckts )

As some of you know, I'm leaving to go on safari this upcoming Sept. I'll be going through the Serengeti and finishing at the Ngorongoro Crater. (East Africa)

I'd like to know of any specific individual lions I should keep an eye out for, I don't really see any threads on lion pride names or coalitions throughout that area, can anyone help me with this?
Thanks
6 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

Spalea Offline
Wildanimal Lover
******
#2

@Pckts:

I don't know how to do differently from where I am (Switzerland) but I have noted:

The "Vumbi" (dist) pride, accounts dating from 2015:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/wi...me=3205386

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaSKF_kBZ2g (beautiful report/movie)

An entire lions pride in a tree:

http://www.grindtv.com/wildlife/rare-pho...JGQ7iYq.97

The "Vumbi" pride seems to be the pride star of the Serengeti. I don't find any other comments of prides...

As concerns the Ngorongoro:

General remarks: http://www.kilitreks-safaris.com/visit-n...nzania.htm

They mention five prides of between 10 and 20 animals...
7 users Like Spalea's post
Reply

sanjay Online
Co-owner of Wildfact
*****
#3

I think @Ngala, @Gamiz and @Majingilane can put some information for you
7 users Like sanjay's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#4
( This post was last modified: 07-26-2016, 10:06 PM by Pckts )

(07-26-2016, 12:06 PM)Spalea Wrote: @Pckts:

I don't know how to do differently from where I am (Switzerland) but I have noted:

The "Vumbi" (dist) pride, accounts dating from 2015:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/wi...me=3205386

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaSKF_kBZ2g (beautiful report/movie)

An entire lions pride in a tree:

http://www.grindtv.com/wildlife/rare-pho...JGQ7iYq.97

The "Vumbi" pride seems to be the pride star of the Serengeti. I don't find any other comments of prides...

As concerns the Ngorongoro:

General remarks: http://www.kilitreks-safaris.com/visit-n...nzania.htm

They mention five prides of between 10 and 20 animals...

Thanks for the contribution, hopefully there is more info, Packers studies have been helpful for sure, but other then the one study with C-boy and the Vumbi pride, I haven't really seen too many photos or general ID's of lions from that side.

Edit: A little more to refresh my memory
This is after the Killers almost killed C-Boy:
"After his harrowing experience with the Killers, C-Boy surrendered his claim on the Jua Kali pride and shifted his attentions east. Hildur, his coalition partner, who’d been so little help in the pinch, went with him. By the time I got a glimpse of C-Boy three years later, he and Hildur had established control over two other prides, Simba East and Vumbi, whose territories lay amid the open plains and kopjes (rocky outcrops) south of the Ngare Nanyuki River. This is not the most hospitable part of the Serengeti for lions and their prey—during the dry season it can be lean and difficult—but it offered C-Boy and Hildur an opportunity to start fresh."

"The trouble was male competition. Early next morning Rosengren drove us north from Nichols’s camp to the river, seeking a pride known as Kibumbu, whose small cubs had been fathered by still another coalition. Those males had gone absent in recent months—departed to places unknown, for reasons unknown—and Rosengren wondered who might have supplanted them. That was his assignment, within the broader context of Packer’s lion studies: to chronicle the comings and goings, the births and the deaths, the affiliations and retreats that affect pride size and territorial tenure. If the Kibumbus had new daddies, who might they be? Rosengren had a suspicion—and it was confirmed when, amid the high grass of the riverbank, we came upon the Killers."

"They were handsome devils, a quartet of eight-year-old males, resting in a companionable cluster. They looked forbidding and smug. They’re probably two sets of brothers, Rosengren told me, born within months of each other in 2004. They had been dubbed “the Killers” back in 2008 by another field assistant, based on his inference that they’d killed three collared females, one by one, rather systematically, in a drainage just west of the Seronera River. Such male-on-female violence wasn’t utterly aberrant—it might even be adaptive for males in some cases, opening space for prides that they control by removing competition in the form of neighboring females—but in this case it won the males a malign reputation."

"Although Rosengren told me their individual names as recorded on the cards (Malin, Viking, et cetera), his preference was to call them by their numbers: 99, 98, 94, 93. Those numerals did seem somehow more concordant with their air of opaque, stolid menace. Male 99, seen in profile, had the convex nose line of a Roman senator, as well as a darkish mane, though not so dark as C-Boy’s. Inspecting him through binoculars, I noticed a couple of small wounds on the left side of 99’s face.

Rosengren eased the Land Rover closer, and two of the others, 93 and 94, stirred, turning toward us. In the golden light of sunrise we saw facial injuries on them too: a slice to the nose, a bit of swelling, a gash below the right ear still glistening with pus. Those are fresh, Rosengren said. Something happened last night. And not just a spat over shared food; coalition partners don’t do such damage to one another. It must have been a brawl with other lions. That raised two questions. Whom had the Killers fought? And what did the other guy look like this morning?"
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/0...ammen-text
4 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

Mexico Gamiz Offline
Lion Enthusiast
****
#5

@Pckts Idont know his names...


The Coalition of young Brothers Lion Like each other in the Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania. Taken June15, 2016.
Credits to George Mbaula

*This image is copyright of its original author
9 users Like Gamiz's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#6

Great find, he has some wonderful photos as well. 
Here's a few more
George Mbaula

Good morning all? A recent photo in the Ngorongoro Crater in Tanzania. July21, 2016


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


Here is some Serengeti Lion Images
Serengeti National Park Tanzania

Six cubs in the ‪#‎Serengeti‬ follow their father, half scared, half curious, forming a perfect trail behind him. https://t.co/fRQvZKFugD photography by @joysafaribay

*This image is copyright of its original author


"Clash of the Titans in Serengeti, Tanzania. This was my first time filming wildlife. Not much else I can say about an image like this".. Photography by @martinbuzora — with Charles Msengi.

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


Unfortunately there are no ID's for these Lions.
5 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#7

Anjan Lal
Profile of a Male Lion
Serengeti National Park
Tanzania

*This image is copyright of its original author

2015

*This image is copyright of its original author

A Handsome Male Lion in the Savannah Grasslands of Tanzania
Serengeti National Park
Tanzania

*This image is copyright of its original author


Burrard-Lucas Photography
An impressive male lion photographed in the Serengeti.

*This image is copyright of its original author
6 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

Mexico Gamiz Offline
Lion Enthusiast
****
#8

Pics recents from Ngorongoro Crater National Park


*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author


Relationship and flowers
Lions Before Mating 
Ngorongoro 
Tanzania - May 1, 2016

*This image is copyright of its original author
7 users Like Gamiz's post
Reply

Mexico Gamiz Offline
Lion Enthusiast
****
#9

Two Heads Lion
Grazing in Ngorongoro crater, Tanzania
May 1, 2016
Credits to Jacob Bahar Photography


*This image is copyright of its original author


I asked to Jacob about the pride, and he said to me that is the only pride and the male dominant is the same of the last photo on the flowers.
7 users Like Gamiz's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#10

Thanks for the info @Gamiz
Crazy that they only have one pride in the crater right now.
5 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

United States stoja9 Offline
Banned
#11

I wanna know the story with the lion and croc battling over the zebra! How'd it start? Hod did it end?
3 users Like stoja9's post
Reply

Spalea Offline
Wildanimal Lover
******
#12

(07-27-2016, 08:10 AM)stoja9 Wrote: I wanna know the story with the lion and croc battling over the zebra! How'd it start? Hod did it end?

Pronostic: on land I would say the male lion had the upper hand... Impressive confrontation anyway.
5 users Like Spalea's post
Reply

Argentina Tshokwane Away
Big Cats Enthusiast
******
#13

Everyone, great images and info you have found.

In fact, you've found much more than myself, which is why I didn't comment anything. 

Keep up the good work, and @Pckts we'll be looking forward to the images or videos you'll get.
8 users Like Tshokwane's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#14

(07-27-2016, 05:36 PM)Majingilane Wrote: Everyone, great images and info you have found.

In fact, you've found much more than myself, which is why I didn't comment anything. 

Keep up the good work, and @Pckts we'll be looking forward to the images or videos you'll get.

You can count on it.
I've already gotten fairly familiar with my camera and I can't wait to use it. I can't believe how close it is, I'm ready to experience all of the wonders africa has to offer. Or at least as many as I can fit in with such a short time frame.
7 users Like Pckts's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******
#15

Ranjan Ramchandani
Lion Tree of the Serengeti

*This image is copyright of its original author


Mahendra N
Lion Scape,

Serengeti

*This image is copyright of its original author

Moyophotography
Royal regard

African lion in the Serengeti, Tanzania

*This image is copyright of its original author

Sumant Pinnamaneni


*This image is copyright of its original author

Anjan's Wildlife Photography Page
Presenting Two of My Feline Friends From Tanzania!
Serengeti Lion Twins!
Serengeti National Park
Tanzania

*This image is copyright of its original author
9 users Like Pckts's post
Reply






Users browsing this thread:
7 Guest(s)

About Us
Go Social     Subscribe  

Welcome to WILDFACT forum, a website that focuses on sharing the joy that wildlife has on offer. We welcome all wildlife lovers to join us in sharing that joy. As a member you can share your research, knowledge and experience on animals with the community.
wildfact.com is intended to serve as an online resource for wildlife lovers of all skill levels from beginners to professionals and from all fields that belong to wildlife anyhow. Our focus area is wild animals from all over world. Content generated here will help showcase the work of wildlife experts and lovers to the world. We believe by the help of your informative article and content we will succeed to educate the world, how these beautiful animals are important to survival of all man kind.
Many thanks for visiting wildfact.com. We hope you will keep visiting wildfact regularly and will refer other members who have passion for wildlife.

Forum software by © MyBB