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BARBARY LION

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The 'Barbary Lion', 'Atlas lion' or 'Nubian lion' ''Panthera leo leo'' is a subspecies of lion that has become extinct in the wild. It was believed to be extinct in captivity as well. However, possible Barbary lion individuals or descendants have been located in zoos and circus populations within the last three decades. It is often considered to be the largest of the lion subspecies with males weighing between 400-600 lbs (180 to 270 kg) and females 220-400 lbs (100 to 180 kg), approximately the size of Bengal tigers and Siberian tigers. However, more recent research suggests that it is only slightly larger than most modern African lions, which weigh approximately 400 lbs on average. The Barbary Lion, also called the ''Atlas lion'' or ''Nubian lion'', formerly ranged in North Africa (from Morocco to Libya) and continuing to Egypt. The last known Barbary Lion in the wild was shot in the Atlas Mountains in 1942. The two other primary predators of northern Africa, the Atlas bear and Barbary leopard are now extinct or close to be, respectively.

Contents
Barbary lions in captivity and possible surviving individuals
The Barbary Lion Project
Asiatic Lion - an Asian relative
References
See also
External links
Gallery

Barbary lions in captivity and possible surviving individuals


Possible Barbary lion in captivity

In the 19th century and the early 20th century Barbary Lions were often kept in zoos and circus menageries. One famous purebred Barbary lion named "Sultan" lived in the London Zoo in 1896. Another one is known from Leipzig. Currently there are several dozen individuals in captivity believed to be Barbary lions: Port Lympne Wild Animal Park has twelve specimens [1] descended from animals owned by the King of Morocco. In addition, eleven animals believed to be Barbary lions were found in Addis Ababa zoo, descendants of animals owned by Emperor Haile Selassie.
In the past scientists believed that the distinct sub-species status of the Barbary lion was established by its seemingly fixed external morphology, particularly its heavier mane. However, it is now known that various extrinsic factors influence the colour and size of all lions' manes, such as ambient temperature. As the cooler ambient temperature in European and North American zoos has been found to produce Barbary-like manes on ordinary lions, this characteristic is now considered an inappropriate marker for identifying Barbary ancestry.
In 2005, Mitochondrial DNA research revealed that a lion specimen from Neuwied Zoo is not of sub-Saharan origin according to its mitochondrial lineage and, thus, very likely a descendant of a Barbary lion.
Despite this, Mitochondrial DNA research published in 2006 does support the distinctness of the Barbary lions as a sub-species. The results found a unique mtDNA haplotype to be present in some of those museum specimens believed to be of Barbary descent. This may be a good molecular marker for identifying -- and excluding -- other potential Barbary lions. The mtDNA results revealed that five tested samples of lions from the famous collection of the King of Morocco are not, according to this criterion, maternally Barbary.

The Barbary Lion Project


Barbary lion in captivity, 20th century

The former popularity of the Barbary Lion as a zoo animal provides the only hope to ever see it again in the wild in North Africa.
After years of research into the science of the Barbary Lion and stories of surviving examples, WildLink International, in collaboration with Oxford University, launched their ambitious International Barbary Lion Project. They are using the very latest DNA techniques to identify the DNA 'fingerprint' of the Barbary Lion subspecies. WildLink International has taken bone samples from remains of Barbary Lions in Museums across Europe, like those in Brussels, Paris, Turin and others. These samples are returned to Oxford University where the science team is extracting the DNA sequence that identifies the Barbary as a separate subspecies.
Although the Barbary is officially extinct, WildLink International had identified a handful of lions in captivity around the world that are descended from the original Barbary Lion, like the royal lions in Temara Zoo in Rabat, Morocco. These descendants will be tested against the DNA fingerprint and the degree of any hybridisation (from crossbreeding) can then be determined. The best candidates will then enter a selective breeding programme that will 'breed back' the Barbary Lion. The final phase of the project will see the lions released into a National Park in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.
WildLink International can not be reached anymore and their website is nowadays offline. Everyone is in the dark as to what happened to WildLink International. WildLink International and the University of Oxford had made the deal that WildLink International would raise money for the project and that the university would do the research. With the disappearance of WildLink International no money was raised.
Dr. Noboyuki Yamaguchi, a scientist from the University of Oxford, has used his own funding for as long as possible to further the scientific research on Barbary Lions and its genetics. The project is now indefinitely on hold until the funds can be raised.

Asiatic Lion - an Asian relative


In 1968, a study on the skulls of the Barbary, extinct Cape, Asiatic, and other African lions showed that the same skull characteristics - the very narrow postorbital bar - existed in only the Barbary and the Asiatic lion skulls. This shows that there may have been a close relationship between the lions from Northernmost Africa and Asia. It is also believed that the South European lion that became extinct at the beginning in A.D. 80-100, could have represented the connecting link between the North African and Asiatic lions. It is believed that Barbary lions possess the same belly fold (hidden under all that mane) that appears in the Asian lions today.

References


# Nowell and Jackson, 1996. [2]
# Edwards, John. 1996. London Zoo from Old Photographs 1852 - 1914
# Barnett, R., N. Yamaguchi, I. Barnes & A. Cooper. 2006. Lost populations and preserving genetic diversity in the lion ''Panthera leo'': Implications for its ''ex situ'' conservation. Conservation Genetics. Online full-text pdf
# Burger, J. and Hemmer, H. 2006. Urgent call for further breeding of the relic zoo population of the critically endangered Barbary lion (Panthera leo leo Linnaeus 1758). European Journal of Wildlife Research. Volume 52, Number 1 / March, 2006. pp 54-58. ISSN 1612-4642 (Print) 1439-0574 (Online). Online full-text pdf
# West P.M., Packer C. 2002. Sexual selection, temperature, and the lion’s mane. Science, 297, 1339–1343.
# Yamaguchi, N. & Haddane, B. (2002). The North African Barbary lion and the Atlas Lion Project. International Zoo News 49: 465-481.

See also



Cape Lion

Asiatic Lion Barbary Lion's almost extinct nearest cousin

European lion

Ex-situ conservation

External links



UTV News of a barbary lion being born in Belfast Zoo, the first Barbary Lion born in Ireland

BBC News of three barbary lions delivered to Belfast Zoo 2nd March 2007

Preservation Station - Barbary Lions, the Barbary Lion preservation site.

Zion WildLife Gardens - NZ, dedicated to the preservation of the Big Cats.

The Extinction Website - Species Info - Barbary Lion

Urgent call for further breeding of the relic zoo population of the critically endangered Barbary lion (Panthera leo leo Linnaeus 1758)

Lion (Panthera leo) from “ARKive images of life on Earth” website

Panthera leo (lion) from “Animal Diversity Web”

Gallery



atlas lion vs amur tiger

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