There’s a new queen of the jungle in the Carter household.

As if Beyoncé voicing the lioness character of Nala in the new live-action remake of “The Lion King” wasn’t enough to make her kids proud, Queen Bey gives oldest daughter Blue Ivy her own regal moment on her new album.

On “The Lion King: The Gift” — a companion LP to the movie executive-produced by Beyoncé, featuring original songs in what she has called a “love letter to Africa” — the diva’s 7-year-old daughter with husband Jay-Z gets her own close-up as a featured vocalist on “Brown Skin Girl.”

“Brown skin girl, your skin just like pearls/The best thing in the world/Never trade you for anybody else,” Blue Ivy sweetly sings alongside SAINt JHN — a Brooklyn-born artist of Guyanese descent — at the beginning of the song.

Then Nigeria’s Wizkid and Beyoncé herself join in on the track, which celebrates the beauty of brown-skin sisters. “Your skin is not only dark/It shines and it tells your story,” B croons over the lilting, African-accented groove.

The track shows love for some famous brown-skin bombshells, from Naomi Campbell and Lupita Nyong’o to Beyoncé’s Destiny’s Child cohort Kelly Rowland. “Pose like a trophy when Naomis walk in/She need an Oscar for that pretty dark skin/Pretty like Lupita when the cameras close in/Drip broke the levee when my Kellys roll in,” Beyoncé sings.

But Blue Ivy gets the last word, closing out the song all by herself.

This isn’t the first time Blue Ivy has appeared on one of her mom’s albums. On 2013’s surprise “Beyoncé” album, the then-23-month-old girl talked and giggled on the aptly titled “Blue.”

Clearly, she has inherited her parents’ comfort level in the studio. And having already sat in the front row at the Grammys, this child seems destined to carry on the family’s musical legacy.

In addition to curating “The Lion King: The Gift,” Beyoncé appears on 13 of 27 tracks, including “Bigger” — a soaring, atmospheric ballad punctuated with tribal drums — and the percussive dance jam “Find Your Way Back.”

Elsewhere, Beyoncé reunites with Kendrick Lamar on “Nile,” although at less than two minutes, the track fails to work up the fireworks of their “Freedom” pairing. Better is B’s collaboration with Jay-Z and Childish Gambino” on the smooth vibeout “Mood 4 Eva,” which pulses with the spirit of Africa.

The album closes with “Spirit,” Beyoncé’s ballad that also appears on the proper soundtrack of “The Lion King,” which hits theaters today. Although it won’t go down as one of B’s most memorable songs, the gospel-infused track brings the album to a big Disney finish.