The Strongest LION PRIDE in Luangwa Valley – National Geographic Documentary 2020 (Full HD 1080p)

The Strongest LION PRIDE in Luangwa Valley - National Geographic Documentary 2020 (Full HD 1080p)
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The Strongest LION PRIDE in Luangwa Valley – National Geographic Wild Documentary 2020 (HD 1080p).

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The lion is one of the big cats in the Felidae family and a member of genus Panthera. It has been listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List since 1996, as populations in African range countries declined by about 43% since the early 1990s. Lion populations are untenable outside designated protected areas. Although the cause of the decline is not fully understood, habitat loss and conflicts with humans are the greatest causes of concern. The West African lion population is listed as Critically Endangered since 2016.

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47 Comments

  1. It kind of reminds me of Rosa! After she found Prince badly beaten and lying in the mud on his face she spent about 36 hours not looking for Ziggy but spending her time thinking about Prince, visiting old haunts, and finally after Ziggy did not eat for 4 days momma hunted for the pride! Lions have a period of mourning so it seems!

  2. Bruh, the mwamba pride was huge and full of potential, with a glory future.
    No sane lion would leave all this behind as if it were nothing, just because of the loss of a single female cub.
    Those three douchebags you call "punks" were just too lazy to mate with all their wives and produce enough propper cubs.
    All they ever did was lying and lazing around all day.
    If they want offsprings they should move their fat asses and start mating already.
    But they prefer to run away instead of doing their damn jobs.
    These three “males” were too weak and unworthy to rule over this mighty pride, protect it and provide for their future.
    And searching new females doesn't guarantee more cubs because the males themselves are the problem.
    Everyone can really do without such "males".

  3. Still left with many unsolved pondering: With so many abundant female in the pride, why did the male lions decided to venture out for new pride/females? And how does the communication go there, I mean without a council, without a discussion they all know they have to leave… And when Mother takes her cubs for hiding- how do they know they have to stay hidden for safety? No exchange of words, but they all know what to do, to leave, to return, to hunt, to hide, to mate… Did we humans ever had that?
    As far as cute poor Milo, his troubles are not over. In fact at around 2 years of age his father (or in this case the male lions' coalition) will drive him away from the pride. Without any (male) siblings his chances of survival solo are very slim (maybe 1:10)…

  4. Cried so hard when the mother helped Milo when he was left alone again. She was mourning I guess because the other cub was dead. So glad the love and affection was back again towards Milo ❤ Love Lions

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