Thursday, December 18, 2014

Lion [1] temporary limit: Early Pleistocene Recent Male Female (lioness) conservation status


Lion [1] temporary limit: Early Pleistocene Recent Male Female (lioness) conservation status
Vulnerable (IUCN 3.1) [2] Scientific classification Kingdom: Animalia race: Chordata Class: deng Mammalia Order: - meat-eating animals Family: Felidae Genus: Panthera Species: p. Leo Binomial name Panthera leo (Linnaeus, + 1758) [3] Lion distribution in India. Gir Forest in the state of Gujarat, the last natural range of approximately 300 wild Asiatic lions. Some are planning to reintroduce lion Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary in neighboring Madhya Pradesh. Synonyms Felis leo Linnaeus, 1758 [3]
The lion (Panthera leo) is one of four big cats in the genus Panthera, and a member of the family Felidae Lkuc men with more than 250 kg (550 lb weight), [4], the second-largest living cat after Tiger. deng Wild lions currently exist in Sub - Saharan Africa and in Asia with an endangered remnant population in Gir Forest National Park in India, having disappeared from North Africa and Southwest Asia in historic times. By the late Pleistocene, about 10,000 years ago, the most widespread large land mammal lion was man. They were found in most of Africa, across Eurasia from western Europe to India and the US, to the Yukon is Peru. [5] The Lion vulnerable species, possibly irreversible population decline of thirty to fifty percent over the past two decades in its African range. [2] Lion populations deng are unstable outside designated reserves and national parks. Although the cause of the decline is not fully understood, habitat loss and conflicts with humans deng are currently the greatest causes of concern. Within Africa, the West African lion population is particularly at risk.
Lions live for ten to fourteen years in the wild, while in captivity they can live longer than twenty years &

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