no. female lions are not important enough to have a mane or name
No she does not, but she can have small tufts of fur around her head around her ears but not very often. Males only have a mane when they are fully mature which is about of 3 years of age.
No, tigers do not have manes.
No, tigers do not have manes.
Not as lions do, true, but males of most subspecies grow a ruff of longer hair around the cheek area. Siberian and Bengal tigers have the largest ruff, but the Sumatran race has a scant or absent ruff on the cheeks.
No, unlike lions, tigers have no mane. But, tiger males do have a long growth of hair around the neck just behind the jaws.
No. Not necessarily.
Surprisingly yes
Why does Snowball destroy the ribbons that were used to decorate the horses' manes and tails after the rebellion?
the females don't have manes
Lions ain't much weaker. In fact, lions and tigers are virtically the same creature. Here's example. A tiger can drag untouched gaur over 5-8m. Lion can drag untouched girrafe over 5-11m. Gaur is just slightly heavier but the giraffe can be dragged for longer. They are about equal in power.
horse do have manes!
tigers are bigger then lions and the most biggest tiger is the Siberian tiger. And the biggest lion is the Barbary lion what lives in the Savannah. So the difference between a lion and tiger is size.
Yes, males have manes.
Nope. White tigers and white lions are different breeds of large cats. Just like regular lions and tigers are different, and look different (male lions have manes, tigers have stripes for instance), the white versions of each are also different.
Pablo Curatella Manes was born in 1891.
Pablo Curatella Manes died in 1962.
Donald Manes was born on 1934-01-18.
József Manes Österreicher died in 1831.
József Manes Österreicher was born in 1756.
Donald Manes died on 1986-03-13.
Enrico Mastracchi Manes was born in Rome, in Lazio, Italy.
Not all wild horses have erect manes and not all domestic horses have 'floppy' manes. Some wild horses developed erect manes to help with camouflage and cooling. While domestic horses and other wild horses mainly have floppy manes to help shoo away bugs.