Killer Big Cats

Killer Big Cats
Jessany

MENU

Home Cave

Tigers

Lions

Cheetahs

Leopards

Jaguars

Hybrids

Guestbook

Gallaries

Kittens

Cubs


 


 

 

 

Leopards

LEOPARD (Panthera pardus)

Common Name: Leopard

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata (Vertebrata)
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Pantherinae Panthera
Species: pardus  (asian)
Sub-species: (Not all listed, these are the
 most common)
Javan leopard – P.p. melas
Amur leopard – P.p. orientalis
Indian leopard – P.p. fusca
North Chinese leopard – P.p. japonensis
Somali leopard – P.p. nanopardus
Zanzibar leopard – P.p. adersi
Sinai leopard – P.p. jarvisi
Sri Lankan leopard – P.p. kotiya
Barbary leopard – P.p. panthera
Persian leopard – P.p. saxicolor
Arabian leopard – P.p. nimr
Anatolian leopard – P.p. tulliana
Caucasus leopard – P.p. ciscaucasica
Indochinese leopard – P.p. delacouri
   African leopard - P.p. leopardus (pictured, spotted above)
 

The leopards are dispersed over a wider area today, than that of any of the other large cats. Ranging across most of the African continent, with the exception of the Sahara Desert rgeion. Throughout parts of Asia Minor and the Middle East to India, Pakistan, China, Siberia, much of mainland southeast Asia, and the islands of Java and Sri Lanka.

The size of the leopard varies greatly in different geographical regions. There are subspecies of large leopards in Iran and West Africa and small subspecies in Somalia and Java. The leopard averages between five and eight feet in length and weighs from 60 to 210 pounds in the wild. Distribution of the leopard reflects the diverse adaptability of the group, extending throught the African continent and much of southeast Asia, including the Arabian peninsula and Indonesian islands. It is at home in woodlands, lowland forests and mountain heights, savannas, and even dry steppe habitats. The leopard's remarkable adaptability to different environments is an indication that it is basically an unspecialized animal, favoring forest and forest boundary habitats where it can utilize trees for protection and observation platforms.

The leopard's lifestyle is a direct reflection of its environment, where it hunts a wide variety of prey species, being truly opportunistic in their feeding habits. Leopards catch and feed on everything from insects and rodents up to large ungulates such as giraffe and buffalo calves which may weigh in excess of 200 pounds. In areas where scavengers such as lions and hyenas are a threat, often stealing the prey, the leopard's remarkable strength and agility allow it to climb trees in search of a resting place, vantage lookout, or a place to store and protect dead prey animals. Its compact body, with graceful trademark tail dangling elagantly from a tree like a velvet rope, is the image that captures the essence of this most powerful carnivore. The ability to hoist large game up into the trees allows the leopard to hunt less frequently as compared to ground dwelling cats often sharing the same habitat, such as cheetahs, who often loose prey to merauding lions or hyenas. One of the most accomplished feline stalkers, the leopard's shadowy figure slinks from one patch of cover to another, inconspicious, infinitely patient in search of food. Because of its hunting technique, silent and solitary, the opportunistic leopard is able to live off a much broader spectrum of prey than the lion or cheetah.

Leopards have no breeding season but to tend to mate in January and February. After maiting, the pair splits up, with the female caring for the resulting cubs. Litters average two cubs, born blind with each weighing one and a half to two pounds, after a gestation period of 90 to 105 days. The coat of the leopard cub is wooly with spots much like the adult pattern, although the background color on the adult is more subdued. The cubs are weaned by the age of three months when they begin to accompany their mother on hunts. The whitish tip of the mother leopard's tail is held upright during forays throughout the habitat. This erect tail posture apparently provides the cubs with an eyelevel visual marker, helping them follow their mother through the tall grasses and shrubs. The cubs ultimately remain with their mother for 18 to 24 months when, they leave to establish territories of their own. The average life expectancy for a leopard in the wild is 15 to 20 years with captive individuals often exceeding 25 years.

Leopards seldom become man-eaters but a number of often exagerated tales of killer leopards is sprinkled in the literature. One particularly terrifying story involves the man-eating leopard of Rudyaprayag, which stalked and killed pilgrims en route to Hindu shrines in northern India. Reports of more than 115 attacks, over an eight year period, have all been attributed to a single leopard, although more than one leopard appears to have been involved and many missing person reports were indiscriminately attributed to this cat. Another less famous man-eating cat, the Panwar leopard, is reported to have killed and eaten more than 375 victims.

 


Black Leopard

The leopards, with more than 20 subspecies described, are included in the genus Panthera on the basis of several features. It is one of the roaring cats, capable of producing a deep sawing roar similar to that of the jaguar. The leopard is also like the jaguar in coat pattern, with dark spots or rosettes. Although the size of the rosettes varies over geographical region, leopard rosettes remain empty of markings while jaguars generally have one to four dark spots inside the open spots. The background color of the leopard's coat varies from shades of yellow through a reddish brown, with some albino, although quite rare, specimines reported. A melanistic version, "black panthers", of the leopard is common in many populations, especially in Southeast Asia where the low light conditions of the tropical forests floors seem to have a selective advantage for darker coat coloration. The melanistic coloration is resultant from a recessive gene which may be present in either, or both parents. It is therefore common to have normal and melanistic offspring in the same litter. Of all the big cats, the leopard is most likely to show a melanistic coloration in the wild. Considering body composition, size and coloration, the leopards and jaguars appear to be the most closely related of the pantherines.


Snow Leopards

Taxonomy
 
  Kingdom: Animalia
  Phylum: Chordata
  Class: Mammalia
  Order: Carnivora
  Family: Felidae
  Genus: Uncia
  Species: uncia

 Physical Attributes
 
  Shoulder Height:
       24 in. (60 cm)
  Head and Body Length:
       35-53 in. (90-135 cm)
  Tail Length:
       35 in (90 cm)
  Weight:
       65-165 lb. (30-75 kg)

 Life Information
 
  Gestation: 98-104 days
  Litter size: 1-5
  Age at sexual maturity:
      Male: 18 months
      Female: 18 months
  Life Span: 21 years (captivity)

Snow Leopard
(Panthera Uncia)

Snow Leopard (Uncia uncia)

Range and Habitat

The snow leopard is a pantherine cat, but is not considered one of the great cats because it cannot roar. Males are significantly larger then the females. They have thick long fur that is between 1-2 inches long all over, shorter on the back, and longer on the belly. Dark black rosettes and spots flank its light grey to light cream-colored fur. Their fur color becomes lighter in the winter. Snow leopards have a stocky body set on very short legs, which is odd for a non-arboreal cat because these are the physical characteristics of an arboreal cat. It has a very long, heavily furred tail, and large paws. Their hind legs are longer than their front legs, similar to the lynx, which is an adaptation to living in areas of thick snow. Their head is more rounded, and they are smaller than true leopards (Panthera pardus).

Diet
Snow leopards are very active during the day, more active around dawn and dusk, known as crepuscular behavior. There is very little known about the lifestyle of these secretive cats. They are very agile and prefer the rocky cliffs, where they can better stalk and hide from their prey. Snow leopards often congregate to hunt and play. After a gestation period is 14-15 weeks, 1-5 cubs are born, from April to June, in a den lined with fur. The female will use the same den site year after year. They open their eyes at nine days, and are weaned at 2 months. They stay with their mothers until they are 18 months old.

Male snow leopards have a territory of 138-1,500 km². They mark their territories with urine, feces, and scrapping on the ground. Male and female ranges overlap, and pairs have been observed hunting together. Though they were usually considered to be solitary, they have long-lasting pair-bonds that follow a long courtship period.


Threats
The snow leopard has most likely never been very common throughout its range, due to the harsh enviromnent in which it lives. They are endangered, with an estimated 4000-7000 left in the wild. It is speculated that it is more towards the lower end. They are endangered due to hunting for their fur and body parts, and eating poisoned marmots and pikas. Livestock owners kill them as they see them as a threat. They are protected in India and Russia, but legal hunting is still allowed in Mongolia. They are poached in the countries that they are protected.
There are no recognized subspecies of snow leopard.
;

  

|  Killer Cats© 2005 All Rights Reserved.
  |


Create a free website at Webs.com