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The Nature of Lions: Social Cats of the Savannas - Hardcover

 
9781552975428: The Nature of Lions: Social Cats of the Savannas
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In a remarkable text, Eric Grace sets out to discover the true nature of lions. His lively and informed discussion of these creatures is accompanied by stunning photographs by the world-renowned wildlife photographer Art Wolfe.

From how a lion's physical construction makes it one of nature's greatest hunters, to the conditions that have made lions the only truly social cats, all aspects of lions' biology and behavior are discussed in The Nature of Lions. The book explores the magical and checkered relationship between humans and lions from prehistory to the present, and includes a look at the status of lions today and efforts to preserve them.

Throughout, spectacular photographs show lions chasing a herd of wildebeests, eating their kill on the savanna, caring for their young, or basking in the shade of an acacia tree. Together, the images and text capture the power and majesty of this most social of cats.

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About the Author:

Eric Grace is the author of numerous books, including The Nature of Monarch Butterflies: Beauty in Flight and Biotechnology Unzipped. He lives in Victoria, British Columbia.

Art Wolfe is one of the most celebrated wildlife photographers in the United States. His award-winning photography is featured frequently in periodicals such as National Geographic, Smithsonian and Outdoor Photographer. His many books include Light on the Land, Bears: Their Life and Behavior and The Art of Photgraphing Nature. He lives in Seattle, Washington.

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Preface

The lion sits sphinxlike in the shade of an acacia tree. Front paws aligned, face serene, he does not acknowledge that a truckload of humans has stopped 20 meters (65 feet) away. The truck's engine is turned off, and the passengers sweat under the late afternoon sun. A fly settles on the broad slope of the lion's nose, then dances up toward the dark, moist corner of one eye. I marvel at its impertinence.

Wildebeests grunt behind us. Weaver birds flit overhead and then settle, chattering, among the thorny branches of the acacia tree. There is a low murmur among us humans. The click and whir of cameras irritate me but do not concern the lion.

The lion has seduced us. He seems embraceable. He is a giant pussy cat. One of the people in the truck must think so, for he jokingly puts a leg over the side of the truck as if to jump down and stroll over to pet the golden fur.

In the 1941 movie version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Spencer Tracy artfully changes his face and body from benign to sinister with the subtlest of maneuvers. Cued by the movement from the truck, the lion (he isn't acting), like Tracy, is transfigured in an instant, with only a very slight turn of his head. Eyes that had been soft and unfocused become hard yellow beacons. Muscles that had yielded to gravity tense into rigid contours. The pussy cat is a predator. No more MGM mascot, he stars in horror flicks featuring tourists dragged from tents in the dark, cold night by unforgiving jaws.

What are lions? Surely they are more than my encyclopedias succinct and rather droll introduction to them as "large roaring cats." Yet again, on reflection, these three words assume in my mind the subtle poetry of a haiku. They are accurate. Certain.

The lion embodies such a powerful combination of beauty and beast, such dramatic grace, that it has captured the human imagination since prehistoric times. In those days, our ancestors elbowed lions from the caves in which both sought shelter, then etched images of these beasts on the cave walls. People and lions are longtime rivals for space, and our shared and bloody history gives human and cat a mutual sense of respect and fear. Inevitably, we endow these carnivores with attributes of our own, giving them roles in our storybooks and transforming them into symbols.

With what eyes must I see lions today, when most people live in cities, our technology dominates the planet, and there are more humans and fewer wild carnivores than at any previous time in our history? In these pages, I set out to discover the nature of lions, knowing at the start that this is an impossible task.

There is the tourist's lion, usually asleep, providing photo opportunities on vacations. The circus trainer's lion, with its echoes of the ancient power struggles between our species. The zookeeper's lion, whose snarls at feeding time evoke the atavistic excitement of nights by a campfire on the African plains. The symbolic lion, far more plentiful than real lions and seen throughout the world in statues, paintings, tapestries, stained glass windows, storybooks, flags, coins, advertisements, door knockers, and many other places. There is the hunter's lion, the livestock farmer's lion, the zoologist's lion, and the writer's lion.

Lions today seem quintessentially African. They parade before our mind's eye in scenes populated by gazelles and zebras, elephants and giraffes. They loll in the equatorial sun on slides from safaris, hunt wildebeests in TV documentaries, form stylish tableaus against dusk-red horizons in the photo spreads of magazines, and lie with closed eyes in black and white at the feet of hunters posed for posterity inside musty books. Yet these typically African inhabitants were part of the landscape over much wider areas of the world until not so long ago.

Chapter 1 of this book traces the evolution of lions and the characteristics that make them unique among cats. Chapter 2 describes their social structure and life history, as well as the web of climate, land, plants, and other animals that shape their lives, The final chapter reviews some historical connections between lions and people and looks at the troubled future facing lions

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  • PublisherFirefly Books
  • Publication date2001
  • ISBN 10 1552975428
  • ISBN 13 9781552975428
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages112
  • Rating

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Publisher: Greystone Books,Canada, 2002
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