homehome Home chatchat Notifications


These lionesses have grown a mane and are acting like males

Five lionesses in Botswana have grown male-like manes and one is even roaring and humping other females.

Mihai Andrei
September 26, 2016 @ 4:23 pm

share Share

Five lionesses in Botswana have grown male-like manes and one is even roaring and humping other females.

Photo by Simon Dures.

The lion king you see above is actually a queen – and she’s not the only one looking like this. Geoffrey D. Gilfillan at the University of Sussex in Falmer, UK and colleagues have reported five lionesses sporting a mane at the Moremi Game Reserve in Botswana’s Okavango delta.

As we learn when we’re kids, male lions have a big mane, they roar, and they’re the kings of the savannah. Females are a bit smaller and don’t have the rich hair, but they do most of the hunting. However, there’s a small group which doesn’t fit that description, as Gilfillan learned. He started studying these lionesses back in March 2014 and especially focused on a female he called SaF05.

“While SaF05 is mostly female in her behaviour – staying with the pride, mating males – she also has some male behaviours, such as increased scent-marking and roaring, as well as mounting other females,” says Gilfillan.

“Although females do roar and scent-mark like males, they usually do so less frequently,” he says. “SaF05, however, was much more male-like in her behaviour, regularly scent-marking and roaring.”

She’s not alone in exhibiting these masculine features. Four other females have been spotted doing similar things and also growing manes. It’s not clear why this happens, but it’s most likely linked to an increased testosterone production. In lions, testosterone directly affects the mane. Castrated lions, for example, will lose their ability to produce testosterone and their mane will fall off as a result. Something like this, but in reverse, could be what’s happening here. It wouldn’t be the first time either. In 2014 13-year-old lioness named Emma at the National Zoological Gardens of South Africa started to grow an incredible mane.

This is how female lions generally look like. Photo by Mr. TinDC

Biologists working at the zoo removed her ovaries and found something surprising.

“Surprisingly, the ‘ovaries’ that were removed only contained cells normally seen in the testicles of males. This was obviously where the testosterone was being produced,” said the zoo’s clinical veterinarian, Adrian Tordiffe, at the time.

“After her ovaries were removed, Emma gradually lost her mane hair and returned to her normal female good looks.”

The changes might offer a bonus when the pride is competing with other prides, but it might also signal something much more worrying. The females might be carrying a very rare genetic mutation which also makes them infertile. This means that the anomaly will not spread to the offspring, but it also means that the pride will have a hard time creating offspring in the first place.

Luke Hunter, president and chief conservation officer at the global wild cat conservation organisation Panthera, believes there’s no reason to worry.

“I don’t think this is anything to be concerned about,” says Hunter. “Although the females are apparently infertile, they otherwise appear to live long, healthy lives. And from a conservation perspective, there is nothing to suggest the pattern is increasing or will ever be anything more than a rare, local phenomenon.”

From a scientific point of view, it’s extremely interesting. A notable episode took place when SaF05 hunted a zebra. A neighboring pride then stole the zebra from her and in response, she went and killed two cubs from the other pride. This is extremely uncommon for females but quite common in males.

Journal Reference: Rare observation of the existence and masculine behaviour of maned lionesses in the Okavango Delta, Botswana.

share Share

Scientists Detect the Most Energetic Neutrino Ever Seen and They Have No Idea Where It Came From

A strange particle traveled across the universe and slammed into the deep sea.

Autism rates in the US just hit a record high of 1 in 31 children. Experts explain why it is happening

Autism rates show a steady increase but there is no simple explanation for a "supercomplex" reality.

A New Type of Rock Is Forming — and It's Made of Our Trash

At a beach in England, soda tabs, zippers, and plastic waste are turning into rock before our eyes.

A LiDAR Robot Might Just Be the Future of Small-Scale Agriculture

Robots usually love big, open fields — but most farms are small and chaotic.

Scientists put nanotattoos on frozen tardigrades and that could be a big deal

Tardigrades just got cooler.

This underwater eruption sent gravitational ripples to the edge of the atmosphere

The colossal Tonga eruption didn’t just shake the seas — it sent shockwaves into space.

50 years later, Vietnam’s environment still bears the scars of war – and signals a dark future for Gaza and Ukraine

When the Vietnam War finally ended on April 30, 1975, it left behind a landscape scarred with environmental damage. Vast stretches of coastal mangroves, once housing rich stocks of fish and birds, lay in ruins. Forests that had boasted hundreds of species were reduced to dried-out fragments, overgrown with invasive grasses. The term “ecocide” had […]

America’s Cornfields Could Power the Future—With Solar Panels, Not Ethanol

Small solar farms could deliver big ecological and energy benefits, researchers find.

Plants and Vegetables Can Breathe In Microplastics Through Their Leaves and It Is Already in the Food We Eat

Leaves absorb airborne microplastics, offering a new route into the food chain.

Explorers Find a Vintage Car Aboard a WWII Shipwreck—and No One Knows How It Got There

NOAA researchers—and the internet—are on the hunt to solve the mystery of how it got there.