The Truth About Lions
The world's foremost lion expert reveals the brutal, secret world of the king of beasts
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 9)
It took a while for Packer to tune into such dramas. When he first visited the Serengeti lions in 1974, he concluded that “lions were really boring.” The laziest of all the cats, they were usually collapsed in a stupor, as if they had just run a marathon, when in reality they hadn’t moved a muscle in 12 hours. Packer had been working under Jane Goodall in Tanzania’s Gombe Stream National Park, observing baboons. He slept in a metal structure called The Cage to be closer to the animals. In 1978, when Packer’s plan to study Japanese monkeys fell through, he and a fellow primatologist, Anne Pusey, to whom he was married at the time, volunteered to take over the Lion Project, begun 12 years earlier by the American naturalist George Schaller.
By the time Packer and Pusey installed themselves in the Lion House, scientists were well aware that lions are ambush predators with little stamina and that they gorge at a kill, each one downing up to 70 pounds in a sitting. (Lions eat, in addition to antelope and wildebeest, crocodiles, pythons, fur seals, baboons, hippopotamuses, porcupines and ostrich eggs.) Lion territories are quite large—15 square miles on the low end, ranging up to nearly 400—and are passed down through generations of females. Lions are vigorous when it comes to reproduction; Schaller observed one male mate 157 times in 55 hours.
Packer and Pusey set out not just to document lion behavior but to explain how it had evolved. “What we wanted to do was figure out why they did some of these things,” Packer says. “Why did they raise their cubs together? Did they really hunt cooperatively?”
They kept tabs on two dozen prides in minute detail, photographing each animal and naming new cubs. They noted where the lions congregated, who was eating how much of what, who had mated, who was wounded, who survived and who died. They described interactions at kills. It was slow going, even after they put radio collars on several lions in 1984. Packer was always more troubled by the lions’ sloth than their slavering jaws. Following prides at night—the animals are largely nocturnal—he sometimes thought he would go mad. “I read Tolstoy, I read Proust,” he says. “All the Russians.” Packer and Pusey wrote in one article that “to the list of inert noble gases, including krypton, argon and neon, we would add lion.”
Still, they began to see how prides functioned. Members of a large pride didn’t get any more to eat than a lone hunter, mostly because a solitary animal got the proverbial lion’s share. Yet lions band together without fail to confront and sometimes kill intruders. Larger groups thus monopolize the premier savanna real estate—usually around the confluence of rivers, where prey animals come to drink—while smaller prides are pushed to the margins.
Even the crèche, or communal nursery that is the social core of every pride, is shaped by violence, Packer says. He and Pusey realized this after scrutinizing groups of nursing mothers for countless hours. A lactating female nursed another’s young rarely, usually after an unrelated cub sneaked onto her nipple. An alert lioness reserves her milk for her own offspring. In contrast to the widespread belief that crèches were maternal utopias, Packer and Pusey found that nursing mothers stick together chiefly for defense. During takeovers by outside males, solitary females lost litter after litter, while cooperating lionesses stood a better chance of protecting their cubs and fending off males, which can outweigh females by as much as 50 percent.
Surviving cubs go on to perpetuate the bloody cycle. Juvenile females often join forces with their mother’s pride to defend the home turf. Males reared together typically form a coalition around age 2 or 3 and set out to conquer prides of their own. (Hard-living males rarely live past age 12; females can reach their late teens.) A lone male without a brother or cousin will often team up with another singleton; if he doesn’t, he is doomed to an isolated life. A group of lions will count its neighbors’ roars at night to estimate their numbers and determine if the time is right for an attack. The central insight of Packer’s career is this: lions evolved to dominate the savanna, not to share it.
As we crossed the plains one morning, the Land Rover—broken speedometer, no seat belts, cracked side mirrors, a fire extinguisher and a roll of toilet paper on the dashboard—creaked like an aged vessel in high seas. We plowed through oceans of grasses, mostly brown but also mint green, salmon pink and, in the distance, lavender; the lions we hunted were a liquid flicker, a current within a current. The landscape on this day did not look inviting. Sections of the giant sky were shaded with rain. Zebra jaws and picked-clean impala skulls littered the ground. Bones don’t last long here, though; hyenas eat them.
Packer and a research assistant, Ingela Jansson, were listening through headphones for the ping-ping-ping radio signal of collared lions. Jansson, driving, spotted a pride on the other side of a dry gully: six or seven lions sitting slack-jawed in the shade. Neither she nor Packer recognized them. Jansson had a feeling they might be a new group. “They may never have seen a car before,” she whispered.
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Related topics: Carnivores Hunting Conservation Scientists Ecology Tanzania Serengeti
Additional Sources
Into Africa by Craig Packer, The University of Chicago Press, 1994
"Group territoriality and the benefits of sociality in the African lion, Panthera leo," Anna Mosser and Craig Packer, Animal Behaviour, June 24, 2009.
"Why Lions Form Groups: Food Is Not Enough," C. Packer et al., The American Naturalist, July 1990.
"Non-offspring nursing in social carnivores: minimizing the costs," Anne E. Pusey and Craig Packer, Behavioral Ecology, Winter 1994.
"Sexual Selection, Temperature, and the Lion's Mane," Peyton M. West and Craig Packer, Science, August 23, 2002.









Comments (36)
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Why did something or someone do such harm to that lion. That is just cruel .I bet the lion DID NOT DO ANYTHING . RESPECT ALL ANIMALS !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by precious on February 4,2013 | 10:53 AM
THE TRUTH ABOUT LIONS is my favourite programme. . .and lions are my favourite big cats i wish to see them in his free nature . . .and my desire is to work for saving the lions . . .CRAIG PARKER is my favourite man. .
Posted by on June 15,2012 | 03:10 AM
Hello, i'm wanting to study lion's. How do i get to that goal?
Posted by Jarrett Buckman on February 29,2012 | 08:24 AM
Great article. Sad though the countless videos of trophy lion-hunting on streaming sites like YouTube. And whats worse, they target females and young males and then when thats not enough, past the quota, they shoot up more "trophy lions". I truly understand the problems of man-eaters and cattle killers for i live close to leopards and tigers in an urban setting. I've read a lot about sustainable hunting and conservation. So how come those African villagers are so poor without proper beds to sleep on and homes/fences to guard them? If the hunting industry rakes in billions, where is the distribution of resources to the people with the exception of meat? And why does it always look so disturbing to see half a dozen men more shoot one lion? Does not the so called GREAT WHITE HUNTER have the courage and nerve to take on a lion one on one like in the old days, instead he shoots them when they feed - from trucks, peppers them from multiple barrels(people) like cowards and then poses with them like idiots for all on Google to see. In truth this "noble" hunter with his high powered rifle does not have the ferocity and courage of a lion hence he cannot truly face one...BY HIMSELF.
Trying to convince people about the benefits of trophy lion harvest is sheer rubbish. Many operators are corrupt and shoot more than the quota. Where does all that money go? Why are the people so unprotected and lacking of resources in " a stable but dead poor Tanzania"? Not everyone is a true "hunter", lots of "shooters" as well. Shooting leopards of trees. I mean Jesus, bloodless eyed people get a thrill doing something like that. Losers, the whole lot.
Posted by AL on August 11,2010 | 10:57 AM
Indeed bernad kissui did i fabulous things in the maasai steppe that will never be forgotten,by introducing conservation awareness to local community,loss and cos sharing caused by lion as predation of livestock by lion,introducing fencing to the bomas that will reduce predation during night and many things that will foster community based conservation in maasai steppe.
Iwould like to call upon the government to support this researcher to get rid of human wildlife conflict in the maasai steppe and in Tanzania in general.
Posted by peter parkepu on June 15,2010 | 04:00 AM
Interesting!
Posted by Mike on March 17,2010 | 01:31 PM
Even with the article's intentions, I'd say the whole thing was just demonising the poor creatures non-stop
Posted by Matt on March 16,2010 | 12:28 PM
It's a terrific article, I think it shows an incredible experience from the main researcher Craig Packer, and I had an especial attempt about the courage from researchers to interact with lions, brave lions, cubs, and wildlife from Tanzania’s Serengeti National Park.
Best Regards, From Lima, Perú.
Posted by Ana Cecilia Moreno Alamo on January 17,2010 | 09:27 AM
First I would like to say that my family receives Smithsonian and we find it very educational for all.
With that said, I am very dissapointed in the article Truth About Lions. As a hunter and a veterinarian, I feel the slur directed at the Africa hunting safari industry was 1) not founded in truth and 2) definitely unnecessary! It detracted from an otherwise informative article.
The African hunting safari industry is very proactive in saving African species, especially the lion. They almost single-handedly police poaching in Africa. In countries with out hunting like Kenya, poachers have decimated the game populations.
The African safari industry also provides protein to the local communities in the form of game meat and local jobs for the people of Africa. But most of all, the Safari industry brings in huge sums of foreign money that greatly boosts the African economy.
In short, with out the African safari industry, Africa's wonderful fauna would be poached to oblivion and gone forever. They are the TRUE conservationists!
Posted by J. Lane Easter, DVM on January 16,2010 | 05:38 PM
congratulation tuker for the superb articles you wrote on the decline of lion in Africa and in the world in general,together with Dr bernard kissui,the researcher scientistic at awf, struggling to fight against the decline of the KING OF THE BEAST in africa.i support this peoneer people due to the good work their doing in maasai steppe.A big number lion has been killed by local people by poison then and hunting,so bernard has heavy duty to educate this people.I call upon all the conservationist and all other people who are interest with PANTHERA LEO(lion)to fight against the decline of this cat family by HELPING Dr bernard kissui.
Let not this struggle be the end
Posted by peter on January 16,2010 | 01:09 PM
What a wonderful article. I couldn't put it down! As a lover of Cats(big and small) I wonder if it is possible to obtain a larger picture of the two male lions used in the article. I want to frame it so as to put it along with my other pictures of African animals particularly big cats and elephants. If you could advise on how to obtain said picture I would be extremely grateful.
Thanks you.
Posted by Richard Billie on January 16,2010 | 11:20 AM
I just took a college biology course taught by Craig Packer. w00t w00t!
Posted by Jeremy on January 15,2010 | 04:54 PM
I WANT TO CONGRATULATE ABIGAIL FOR HER ARTICLE ON LIONS. WELL DONE- WELL WRITTEN. ADVISE WHAT E-MAIL TO USE TO WRITE4 ON SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR FUTURE ARTICLES.
TE MINING CAMPS IN NEVADA, ETC. COULD SUPPLY WITH A WEALTH OF INFORMATION ON PEOPLE WHO LIVED IN TEE CAMPS - GHOST TOWNS TODAY.
Posted by SAM OCONNELL on January 13,2010 | 04:11 PM
Thanks to Abigail Tucker for not only telling “The Truth About Lions,” but also for telling the truth about the lion’s decline. “The central issue,” she wrote, “is the growing human population,” pointing out that Tanzania has tripled its numbers – to 42 million – in the just three decades. Human population growth has destroyed lion habitat and placed lions in direct conflict with people. But the problem reaches way beyond Tanzania. The Earth’s population is headed for nine billion or more by mid-century. Africa’s will double by then, to nearly two billion, and the United States will grow from 307 million to 439 million. Even if we control global warming, we will continue to devastate our world through sheer force of numbers. Unlike so many other environmental writers, Tucker has identified the root cause of our planet’s peril.
Posted by Jack Hart on January 11,2010 | 05:23 PM
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