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.
(01-24-2021, 06:51 PM)Potato Wrote: Nsuku was injured on that leg by Kambula females. TB just finished him off. Leg injury could be cause by many different thinks, not just TB. Nharhu male looks good apart from that injury. TB doesn't need to be the case here
Doesn’t need to be, but he is too long injured to be just regular injured, that would heal or partialy heal by now.. But hes is getting worse and worse, which it means thats prob TB, which doesnt allow to heal and it eats its muscle, just like Nsuku, Buddy, Sizananis etc..
He's not too long injured for it to be TB, hip or ligaments/muscle injuries aren't always fully recoverable, and probably none of these lions like nsuku, hip-scar, sizanani, or buddy had TB. They just had injuries that were getting worse cuz you can't go on bedrest in the wild.
Most lions with ligament injuries or sprains can walk it off and recovery with regular meals. They don’t usually have one leg that completely withers away. This is exactly like Buddy from the Orpen males. Also, where are all the females with these same injuries? We’ve seen an old Nkuhuma lioness with her entire thigh muscle ripped open, heal and go back to normal. With a carnivore diet it’s not that hard to rebuild muscle.
It seems like if a male in his prime looses condition rapidly, it has to be an injury plus an illness that prevents them from putting on muscle. Maybe not quite TB but something similar.
like you said, most do with minor injuries. The leg withers away because they can't use it fully so the muscle just atrophies, the rest of the body seems fine because they can still properly use it. You can't walk off a dislocated hip or a fracture that isn't being allowed to heal because it's being stressed no matter how many good meals the lion gets. I have seen multiple times that whenever a lion is injured, people start saying it's TB even though that's something that can be medically diagnosed, and doesn't have to be speculated. It's mostly just dislocated hips and nothing more.