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Mating Behaviour - Data, Videos and Pics

Argentina Tshokwane Away
Big Cats Enthusiast
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#31

Do Leopards Mate in Secret?: By James Tyrrell.

One would have thought so, yes.


A mating pair of leopards will often seek out the relative seclusion of a drainage line or a thicket for their tryst, but every once in awhile this relatively rare act to witness takes place in the open in an unrivalled viewing opportunity.

The Mashaba female was recently found far out of her usual territory mating with the Piva male, for the second time in 10 days. Their first bout had lasted for roughly four days before they seperated, most likely in an attempt to find some food and reestablish their respective territorial boundaries. They had reunited within 48 hours; a risk for the Mashaba female as she was now deep in the territory of the Tamboti female.

The Mashaba female (background) was constantly on the lookout, sniffing all the bushes in the area and clearly aware that she was in another female’s territory.

*This image is copyright of its original author

Having recently lost her latest litter (we suspect to the newly arrived Flat Rock male), she has been mating both with him and the dominant Piva male in the eastern areas of Londolozi. Most of her mating has been taking place in thickets where photography and viewing has been limited, but Alistair Smith and Euce Madonsela found her with the Piva male on a grey and drizzly afternoon, right out in the middle of a clearing.


It has been well documented that female leopards will attempt to mate with multiple males in the area in order to confuse the paternity of their cubs, thus ensuring tolerance from each male. Since up to 40% of leopard infanticide is attribute to unrelated males, this strategy – although not foolproof – certainly has its logic.
The Mashaba female, in venturing far out of the territory she holds, must have deemed the risk affordable in order to mate with the Piva male. Ironically, the day after this sighting he was found only a few hundred metres from Varty Camp, which is deep in the Mshaba female’s normal hunting grounds; a far safer place for her to have attempted an amorous union.

Copulation is generally initiated by the female, who rubs her tail and rear in front of the male whilst growling softly. The Piva male seems relatively uninterested in this picture.

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author

Whatever the case, it is rare that one is granted such an open view of two of these beautiful cats in the open.

Monkeys had been alarming at the pair, but fortunately they did not immediately retreat into cover, as they so often do when their presence is discovered, but instead stayed out in the open for a long time.

*This image is copyright of its original author

At one point they approached Nick Kleer’s Land Rover and mated within a few feet of his bumper; a memory I’m sure he and his guests will never forget..

*This image is copyright of its original author

Both leopards looked relatively hungry, and here they turn their gaze towards a distant herd of impala. The ground was too open to have enabled them to stalk up close enough to anything to attempt to catch it.

*This image is copyright of its original author

Having split up after this particular sighting, the Mashaba female was found near the airstrip yesterday afternoon, and the Piva male had been within a few hundred metres of the same spot in the morning. The female was uttering her rasping call as darkness fell, and she moved into a creek bed near camp where we couldn’t follow. She may well have met up with the male again last night, but neither of them were found this morning so we cannot be sure.

Is she pregnant already, and only mating to placate the Piva male? The good news is that the gestation period of a leopard is only around three months, so we won’t have long to wait and see.
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Messages In This Thread
RE: Mating Behaviour- Data, Videos and Pics. - Tshokwane - 01-10-2017, 08:02 PM
RE: Leopards of Sabi Sands - Tshokwane - 07-26-2016, 05:59 PM



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