Differences in Physical Characteristics
Male lions possess an iconic mane that encircles their head; females do not. The color of the manes indicates both age and prowess. Fully mature males weigh between 330 and 550 lbs.; females weigh between 265 and 395 lbs. Males can reach lengths of 10 feet (including tail), and females are generally less than 9 feet in length. Both sexes reach about 4 feet in height. In the wild, males typically live 12 years; females average 15 years.
Gender Makeup of a Pride
Lions, as the only social cats, live in groups called prides. Prides consist of between three and 40 lions, with 15 being the average. Of these cats, there are generally only one or two males. Females commonly remain with their birth pride for life; males leave after two to four years.
Differences in Pride Responsibilities
Males are primarily responsible for the security of their pride. While they will participate in hunting, they spend the majority of their time on security patrols. They will defend their pride's territory, which can cover up to 100 square miles. Females are primarily responsible for hunting, which typically occurs after dark. They are also the primary caregivers for lion cubs. The eating hierarchy is males first, followed by females and then cubs.
Child Rearing
Female lions have litters of one to six cubs, with the average being two to four. These cubs typically weigh 2 to 4 lbs. at birth. The females of a pride all give birth at the same time. They co-raise the pride's cubs, including suckling one another's cubs. The cubs reach independence at around two years of age. The male's role in child rearing is primarily protection. However, because of the scarcity of food and attacks by other males, around 60 to 70 percent of all cubs die within these two years.
Difference in the Lives of Males
Unlike females, males leave their birth prides at between two to four years of age. They initially form groups or coalitions with other young males from their pride. During this period, the males roam while progressing toward full maturity. Upon reaching maturity, they seek to establish their own prides by taking over other prides. If they are successful in ousting a pride's males, they quickly kill all the pride's cubs. This is done so that they can then mate and sire their own cubs. The killing is necessary because females will not mate again until their cubs reach around two years of age, and the male lion will remain with the pride for only two to three years before being run off himself by new male challengers.