http://www.douglas-hamilton.com/films/lioness/index.htm
It's quite a sad ending but an interesting story none the less.
Last thread, I promise.
Although both animals were on the brink of starvation it was hard to predict which of the two might die first, as the odds were stacked against them both. The calf was utterly reliant on the lioness for protection against predators, but its captive state and association with a lioness deprived it of its sole food source – its mother’s milk. The lioness seemed to have formed such a strong attachment to the calf that she would not leave its side, and since the calf was on an incessant search for its mother and milk the lioness was forced to follow, which in turn prevented her from hunting.
..The baby oryx would follow the adults, and the lioness would give chase using all her predator tactics to recapture it. Oryx calf and lioness would rejoin, the lioness rubbing her head gently down its body... the oryx, gangle-legged, nibbling softly on the lioness' ear.
Local Kenyans from the lodges and around the park arrived in droves to see for themselves a legend in the making. Tourists, sunburnt and dehydrated, were moved to tears. Everyone wanted to do something to help the unlikely pair, and the Warden of Samburu Reserve was under great pressure from every quarter to feed the lioness artificially to keep her alive. Some Kenyans felt that "mungu amefika" god has arrived, or that "dunia ataisha" the world is coming to an end. Even as a scientist my mind kept wandering off into bibilical parable - and the lion shall lay down with the lamb.
..The baby oryx would follow the adults, and the lioness would give chase using all her predator tactics to recapture it. Oryx calf and lioness would rejoin, the lioness rubbing her head gently down its body... the oryx, gangle-legged, nibbling softly on the lioness' ear.
Local Kenyans from the lodges and around the park arrived in droves to see for themselves a legend in the making. Tourists, sunburnt and dehydrated, were moved to tears. Everyone wanted to do something to help the unlikely pair, and the Warden of Samburu Reserve was under great pressure from every quarter to feed the lioness artificially to keep her alive. Some Kenyans felt that "mungu amefika" god has arrived, or that "dunia ataisha" the world is coming to an end. Even as a scientist my mind kept wandering off into bibilical parable - and the lion shall lay down with the lamb.
It's quite a sad ending but an interesting story none the less.
Last thread, I promise.
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