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by bitwize
514 days ago
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Certain prey animals, especially gazelles, engage in dramatic leaps known as stotting. This behavior makes them highly visible to predators. One theory for why they do this is as a fitness signal to predators, who generally want to go for the easy pickin's, not the ones who present a challenge, and represent taking on more effort and risk of injury or just wasted energy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stotting Most lions also know not to prey on humans, for similar reasons: if a lion took a human, it risks being hunted down by other humans related to their prey. Most "man-eating" lions or tigers are starving or injured, therefore desperate, and lions are largely seen in Africa as pest creatures who take livestock. (Hippopotamuses, by contrast, give absolutely no fucks and will kill you on sight. Africans consider the hippopotamus to be the fiercest animal by far, even more so than the lion.) |
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I knew about the stotting, but figured it was for mating. The predator thing makes sense.
Hippos also hang out around humans a lot, which increases the chances of unfortunate misunderstandings (almost always resolving in favor of the hippo).
I remember visiting a village in Uganda, on the banks of the Nile.
They had a couple of jettys, going out into the river, and between them, a series of poles and whatnot. It looked like a fish hatchery.
Didn't matter. It was a hippo sofa. There was this hippo, just lying in the water, right in the middle of one of the busiest areas of the village. We were told that it was a regular. Everyone just ignored it.
The jury is still out, as to whether it is worse to be in front of an angry hippo, or behind an incontinent one.