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  • 2 years ago

Category

🐳
Animals
Transcript
00:00 As we all know, this feline lives on the African continent.
00:10 This other inhabits the American continent.
00:14 Without human action, these two felines would never meet in nature.
00:18 We're here looking for a lioness companion, possibly a jaguar, who would be fed and raised
00:25 with her in the same nursery.
00:28 But in zoos and private breeders, the two species can be bred together.
00:36 The lion and the jaguar are different species, but they belong to the same genus panthera
00:42 in the Philadelphia family.
00:44 And that's where the old question arises.
00:47 Is it possible that these two species have offspring?
00:51 The answer is yes.
00:54 And today you will meet the amazing jaglion.
00:58 The jaglion is the offspring of a male jaguar and a lioness, something that wouldn't be
01:04 possible anywhere but captivity.
01:06 His body has the characteristics of both parents, an extremely muscular structure covered with
01:12 black spots.
01:14 But the color of the coat can vary, tending more towards a golden, orange or even black.
01:21 The only jaglions alive currently reside in Ontario, Canada.
01:26 There are two jaglions born on April 9, 2006 in an unplanned crossing.
01:32 Jazara, female, and Tsunami, a male, were the result of an accidental cross between
01:39 Lola, a lioness, and Diablo, a male black jaguar, in an enclosure.
01:46 The enclosure reported on its website that the male jaguar and the lioness arrived as
01:51 babies and were fed in the same nursery and became constant companions.
01:56 They separated the lioness from the jaguar when it was in heat, but even so, the lioness
02:02 ended up getting pregnant from the male jaguar.
02:05 And the results were these beautiful felines.
02:08 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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