Leopard Cat
The Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis) is a small wild cat of Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent. There are eleven subspecies of Leopard Cat, classified according to their wide geographic dispersal. The Leopard Cat's name is derived from the leopard-like spots prevalent in all subspecies, but its relation to the leopard is distant, as the leopard is a member of a different genus, Panthera.
Distribution
The Leopard Cat has a wide geographic distribution, stretching from Pakistan to Borneo and Manchuria. It can be found in forest areas throughout Indonesia, Philippines, Borneo, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, China, and Taiwan. The cat also can be found in Korea, Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan.[3]
Their range of habitat is varied, and includes tropical forest, scrubland, pine forest, second-growth woodland, semi-desert, and agricultural regions, especially near water sources; they may also be found at heights up to 3,000 metres (9,800 ft).
Physical characteristics
A Leopard Cat at the Bronx Zoo
On average, the Leopard Cat is as large as a Domestic Cat, but there are considerable regional differences: in Indonesia the average head-body length is 46 centimetres (18 in) with a weight of 2.2 kilograms (4.9 lb), while it is 65 centimetres (26 in) and 6 to 7.5 kilograms (13 to 17 lb) in the southern Amur region.[3] The shoulder height is 41 cm (16 in) and the tail is about 40-50% of the head-body length.
The fur color is also variable: it is yellow in the southern populations, but silver-grey in the northern ones. The chest and the lower part of the head are white. The Leopard Cat bears black markings that may be spotted, rosetted, or even forming dotted streaks, depending on the subspecies. There are two dark stripes running from the eyes to the ears, and smaller white streaks running from the eyes to the nose. The backs of the ears are black with a central white spot.[3]
Leopard cats have webbed toes, and are good swimmers.[3]
Habitat and behavior
Leopard cats inhabit a wide range of habitats, including tropical forest, scrubland, pine forest, second-growth woodland, semi-desert, and agricultural regions, especially near water sources; they may also be found at heights up to 3,000 metres (9,800 ft). Within their range, they are generally only absent from arid regions (such as eastern India) and from areas with heavy winter snowfall.
The Leopard Cat is a skilful tree climber, and sometimes hunts or rests in tree branches. It is also able to swim, but will seldom do so. This cat is nocturnal, and during the day it spends its time in dens that may be hollow trees, cavities under roots, or caves. It spends time outside during the day in areas where there are no humans. The Leopard Cat is solitary, except during breeding season, and produces a similar range of vocalisations to the domestic cat.[3]
Male leopard cats occupy home ranges from 3.5 to 7.5 square kilometres (1.4 to 2.9 sq mi) in area, overlapping the territories of several neighbouring females. As with many other cats, the females occupy smaller ranges, in this case being between 2 and 2.5 square kilometres (0.77 and 0.97 sq mi) in size. Both sexes scent mark their territory by spraying urine, leaving faeces in exposed locations, head rubbing, and scratching.[3]
Reproduction and development
There is no fixed breeding period in the southern part of its range; in the colder northern parts it tends to breed around March or April, when the weather is mild enough to support newborn kittens. The estrus period lasts for 5-9 days. If the kittens do not survive, the mother can come into heat again and have another litter that year.
After a gestation period of 60-70 days, two to four kittens are born in a den, where they remain until they are a month old. The kittens weigh about 75 to 130 grams (2.6 to 4.6 oz) at birth and usually double their weight by age of two weeks; at five weeks, they are four times their birth weight. The eyes open at ten days, and the kittens start to eat solid food at 23 days. At the age of four weeks, the permanent canines appear, and the kittens begin to eat solid food.[3]
Leopard cats usually pair for life and raise their kittens together for about 7 to 10 months. Full maturity is reached at 18 months, but in captivity, the male can become ready to breed at 7 months, and the female at 10 months.
Leopard cats have lived for up to thirteen years in captivity.[3]
Diet
An alert leopard cat
Leopard cats are carnivorous, and feed on variety of small prey, including mammals, lizards, amphibians, birds, and insects. In most parts of their range, small rodents such as rats and mice form the major part of their diet. The Northern subspecies of Leopard Cat also eat hares. The diet is often supplemented with grass, eggs, poultry, and aquatic prey.
Leopard cats are active hunters, dispatching their prey with a rapid pounce and bite. Unlike many other small cats, they do not "play" with their food, maintaining a tight grip with their claws until the animal is dead. This may be related to the relatively high proportion of birds in their diet, which are more likely to escape when released than are rodents.[3]
Conservation
In Hong Kong, the Leopard Cat is a protected species under the Wild Animals Protection Ordinance Cap 170. The population is well over 50,000 individuals and although declining, the cat is not endangered.[2]
The conservation status of the Leopard Cat is listed as Appendix II in CITES (species that are not necessarily now threatened with extinction but that may become so unless trade is closely controlled), and of Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Subspecies
Leopard Cat (Javan variety) from Richard Lydekker's "A hand-book to the Carnivora" (1896)
- Prionailurus bengalensis alleni, Hainan Island (China)
- Prionailurus bengalensis bengalensis, India, Bangladesh, Southeast Asian mainland, Yunnan
- Prionailurus bengalensis borneoensis, Borneo
- Prionailurus bengalensis chinensis, China, Taiwan, Philippines
- Prionailurus bengalensis euptailurus, eastern Siberia, Mongolia, Manchuria
- Prionailurus bengalensis heaneyi, Palawan island, Philippines
- Prionailurus bengalensis horsfieldi, Himalaya
- Prionailurus bengalensis javanensis, Java
- Prionailurus bengalensis rabori, Philippines (Negros, Cebu, and Panay)
- Prionailurus bengalensis sumatranus, Sumatra
- Prionailurus bengalensis trevelyani, eastern Pakistan
The Iriomote Cat (P. iriomotensis) was once considered a subspecies of the Leopard Cat. It lives exclusively on the tiny island of Iriomote, one of the Yaeyama Islands in the Japan archipelago.
The Tsushima Cat lives exclusively on Tsushima Island in the Korea Strait. A fragile population, the Tsushima Cat was estimated to number between 70 and 90 in 1997. This cat was first regarded as a separate species, later as a subspecies of the Leopard Cat, and now as a variety of the Manchurian subspecies, P. b. euptailurus.
Recent molecular analysis of leopard cat populations [4] found a clear distinction between northern leopard cat populations (Tsushima, Korea, Siberia, China and Taiwan) and southeast Asian populations. If these genetic differences indicate a specific distinction, P. b. euptailurus may yet be a valid species.
Leopard cats as pets
Keeping a leopard cat as a pet is possible, although a license is required in most places. License requirements vary by location.
The Asian Leopard Cat (P. bengalensis bengalensis) is often mated with a domestic cat to produce hybrid offspring known as a Bengal cat. These hybrids are usually permitted to be kept as pets without a license. For the typical pet owner, a Bengal cat kept as a pet should be least four generations (F4) removed from the Leopard Cat. The "foundation cats" from the first three filial generations of breeding (F1–F3) are usually reserved for breeding purposes or the specialty pet home environment.[5]
References
- ↑ Wozencraft, W. Christopher (16 November 2005). "Order Carnivora (pp. 532-628)". In Wilson, Don E., and Reeder, DeeAnn M., eds. Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2 vols. (2142 pp.). pp. 542–543. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494. http://www.bucknell.edu/msw3.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Sanderson, J., Sunarto, S., Wilting, A., Driscoll, C., Lorica, R., Ross, J., Hearn, A., Mujkherjee, S., Ahmed Khan, J., Habib, B. & Grassman, L. (2008). Prionailurus bengalensis. In: IUCN 2008. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 22 March 2009. Database entry includes a brief justification of why this species is of least concern
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Sunquist, Mel; Sunquist, Fiona (2002). Wild cats of the World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 225-232. ISBN 0-226-77999-8.
- ↑ T. Tamada, B. Siriaroonrat, V. Subramaniam, et al. (2006). "Molecular diversity and phylogeography of the Asian leopard cat, Felis bengalensis...". Zoological science 26: 154–163. doi:10.2108/zsj.25.154. http://www.bioone.org/doi/pdf/10.2108/zsj.25.154.
- ↑ Breeding the ALC with domestic cats
External links
Extant Carnivora species |
|
Kingdom: Animalia · Phylum: Chordata · Class: Mammalia · Infraclass: Eutheria · Superorder: Laurasiatheria |
|
Suborder Feliformia |
|
Nandiniidae |
Nandinia
|
African Palm Civet (N. binotata)
|
|
|
Herpestidae
(Mongooses) |
Atilax
|
Marsh Mongoose (A. paludinosus)
|
|
Bdeogale
|
Bushy-tailed Mongoose (B. crassicauda) · Jackson's Mongoose (B. jacksoni) · Black-footed Mongoose (B. nigripes)
|
|
Crossarchus
|
Alexander's Kusimanse (C. alexandri) · Angolan Kusimanse (C. ansorgei) · Common Kusimanse (C. obscurus) · Flat-headed Kusimanse (C. platycephalus)
|
|
Cynictis
|
Yellow Mongoose (C. penicillata)
|
|
Dologale
|
Pousargues's Mongoose (D. dybowskii)
|
|
Galerella
|
Angolan Slender Mongoose (G. flavescens) · Somalian Slender Mongoose (G. ochracea) · Cape Gray Mongoose (G. pulverulenta) · Slender Mongoose (G. sanguinea)
|
|
Helogale
|
Ethiopian Dwarf Mongoose (H. hirtula) · Common Dwarf Mongoose (H. parvula)
|
|
Herpestes
|
Short-tailed Mongoose (H. brachyurus) · Indian Gray Mongoose (H. edwardsii) · Indian Brown Mongoose (H. fuscus) · Egyptian Mongoose (H. ichneumon) · Small Asian Mongoose (H. javanicus) · Long-nosed Mongoose (H. naso) · Collared Mongoose (H. semitorquatus) · Ruddy Mongoose (H. smithii) · Crab-eating Mongoose (H. urva) · Stripe-necked Mongoose (H. vitticollis)
|
|
Ichneumia
|
White-tailed Mongoose (I. albicauda)
|
|
Liberiictus
|
Liberian Mongoose (L. kuhni)
|
|
Mungos
|
Gambian Mongoose (M. gambianus) · Banded Mongoose (M. mungo)
|
|
Paracynictis
|
Selous' Mongoose (P. selousi)
|
|
Rhynchogale
|
Meller's Mongoose (R. melleri)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hyaenidae
(Hyenas) |
|
|
Felidae |
Large family listed below
|
|
Viverridae |
Large family listed below
|
|
Eupleridae |
Small family listed below
|
|
|
|
Family Felidae |
|
Felinae |
Acinonyx
|
|
|
|
|
|
Catopuma
|
|
|
Felis
|
|
|
Leopardus
|
Pantanal Cat ( L. braccatus) · Colocolo ( L. colocolo) · Geoffroy's Cat ( L. geoffroyi) · Kodkod ( L. guigna) · Andean Mountain Cat ( L. jacobitus) · Pampas Cat ( L. pajeros) · Ocelot (L. pardalis) · Oncilla (L. tigrinus) · Margay ( L. wiedii)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pardofelis
|
Marbled Cat (P. marmorata)
|
|
Prionailurus
|
|
|
Profelis
|
African Golden Cat (P. aurata)
|
|
Puma
|
|
|
|
Pantherinae |
|
|
|
|
Family Viverridae (includes Civets) |
|
Paradoxurinae |
|
|
|
Arctogalidia
|
Small-toothed Palm Civet (A. trivirgata)
|
|
Macrogalidia
|
Sulawesi Palm Civet (M. musschenbroekii)
|
|
Paguma
|
Masked Palm Civet (P. larvata)
|
|
Paradoxurus
|
|
|
|
Hemigalinae |
Chrotogale
|
Owston's Palm Civet (C. owstoni)
|
|
Cynogale
|
Otter Civet (C. bennettii)
|
|
Diplogale
|
Hose's Palm Civet (D. hosei)
|
|
Hemigalus
|
Banded Palm Civet (H. derbyanus)
|
|
|
Prionodontinae
(Asiatic linsangs) |
Prionodon
|
Banded Linsang (P. linsang) · Spotted Linsang (P. pardicolor)
|
|
|
Viverrinae |
Civettictis
|
African Civet (C. civetta)
|
|
Genetta
(Genets)
|
Abyssinian Genet (G. abyssinica) · Angolan Genet (G. angolensis) · Bourlon's Genet (G. bourloni) · Crested Servaline Genet (G. cristata) · Common Genet (G. genetta) · Johnston's Genet (G. johnstoni) · Rusty-spotted Genet (G. maculata) · Pardine Genet (G. pardina) · Aquatic Genet (G. piscivora) · King Genet (G. poensis) · Servaline Genet (G. servalina) · Haussa Genet (G. thierryi) · Cape Genet (G. tigrina) · Giant Forest Genet (G. victoriae)
|
|
Poiana
|
Leighton's Linsang (P. leightoni) · African Linsang (P. richardsonii)
|
|
Viverra
|
Malabar Large-spotted Civet (V. civettina) · Large-spotted Civet (V. megaspila) · Malayan Civet (V. tangalunga) · Large Indian Civet (V. zibetha)
|
|
Viverricula
|
Small Indian Civet (V. indica)
|
|
|
|
|
Family Eupleridae |
|
Euplerinae |
|
|
|
Eupleres
|
Falanouc (E. goudotii)
|
|
Fossa
|
Malagasy Civet (F. fossana)
|
|
|
Galidiinae |
Galidia
|
Ring-tailed Mongoose (G. elegans)
|
|
Galidictis
|
Broad-striped Malagasy Mongoose (G. fasciata) · Grandidier's Mongoose (G. grandidieri)
|
|
Mungotictis
|
Narrow-striped Mongoose (M. decemlineata)
|
|
Salanoia
|
Brown-tailed Mongoose (S. concolor)
|
|
|
|
|
Suborder Caniformia (cont. below) |
|
Ursidae
(Bears) |
Ailuropoda
|
Giant Panda (A. melanoleuca)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ursus
|
|
|
|
Mephitidae
(Skunks) |
Conepatus
(Hog-nosed
skunks)
|
Molina's Hog-nosed Skunk (C. chinga) · Humboldt's Hog-nosed Skunk (C. humboldtii) · American Hog-nosed Skunk (C. leuconotus) · Striped Hog-nosed Skunk (C. semistriatus)
|
|
Mephitis
|
Hooded Skunk (M. macroura) · Striped Skunk (M. mephitis)
|
|
Mydaus
|
Sunda Stink Badger (M. javanensis) · Palawan Stink Badger (M. marchei)
|
|
Spilogale
(Spotted skunks)
|
Southern Spotted Skunk (S. angustifrons) · Western Spotted Skunk (S. gracilis) · Eastern Spotted Skunk (S. putorius) · Pygmy Spotted Skunk (S. pygmaea)
|
|
|
Procyonidae |
Bassaricyon
(Olingos)
|
Allen's Olingo (B. alleni) · Beddard's Olingo (B. beddardi) · Bushy-tailed Olingo (B. gabbii) · Harris's Olingo (B. lasius) · Chiriqui Olingo (B. pauli)
|
|
Bassariscus
|
Ring-tailed Cat (B. astutus) · Cacomistle (B. sumichrasti)
|
|
Nasua
(Coatis inclusive)
|
White-nosed Coati (N. narica) · South American Coati (N. nasua)
|
|
Nasuella
(Coatis inclusive)
|
Mountain Coati (N. olivacea)
|
|
Potos
|
Kinkajou (P. flavus)
|
|
Procyon
|
|
|
|
Ailuridae |
|
|
|
|
Suborder Caniformia (cont. above) |
|
Otariidae
(Eared seals)
(includes fur seals
and sea lions)
(Pinniped inclusive) |
Arctocephalus
|
South American Fur Seal (A. australis) · Australasian Fur Seal (A. forsteri) · Galápagos Fur Seal (A. galapagoensis) · Antarctic Fur Seal (A. gazella) · Juan Fernández Fur Seal (A. philippii) · Brown Fur Seal (A. pusillus) · Guadalupe Fur Seal (A. townsendi) · Subantarctic Fur Seal (A. tropicalis)
|
|
Callorhinus
|
Northern Fur Seal (C. ursinus)
|
|
Eumetopias
|
Steller Sea Lion (E. jubatus)
|
|
Neophoca
|
Australian Sea Lion (N. cinerea)
|
|
Otaria
|
South American Sea Lion (O. flavescens)
|
|
Phocarctos
|
New Zealand Sea Lion (P. hookeri)
|
|
Zalophus
|
|
|
|
Odobenidae
(Pinniped inclusive) |
|
|
Phocidae
(Earless seals)
(Pinniped inclusive) |
Cystophora
|
Hooded Seal (C. cristata)
|
|
Erignathus
|
Bearded Seal (E. barbatus)
|
|
Halichoerus
|
Gray Seal (H. grypus)
|
|
Histriophoca
|
Ribbon Seal (H. fasciata)
|
|
Hydrurga
|
Leopard Seal (H. leptonyx)
|
|
Leptonychotes
|
Weddell Seal (L. weddellii)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monachus
|
|
|
Ommatophoca
|
Ross Seal (O. rossi)
|
|
Pagophilus
|
Harp Seal (P. groenlandicus)
|
|
Phoca
|
|
|
Pusa
|
|
|
|
Canidae |
Large family listed below
|
|
Mustelidae |
Large family listed below
|
|
|
|
Family Canidae |
|
Atelocynus |
Short-eared Dog (A. microtis)
|
|
Canis |
|
|
Cerdocyon |
Crab-eating Fox (C. thous)
|
|
Chrysocyon |
|
|
Cuon |
|
|
Lycalopex |
Culpeo (L. culpaeus) · Darwin's Fox (L. fulvipes) · South American Gray Fox (L. griseus) · Pampas Fox (L. gymnocercus) · Sechuran Fox (L. sechurae) · Hoary Fox (L. vetulus)
|
|
Lycaon |
|
|
Nyctereutes |
|
|
Otocyon |
Bat-eared Fox (O. megalotis)
|
|
Speothos |
Bush Dog (S. venaticus)
|
|
Urocyon |
|
|
Vulpes |
|
|
|
|
Family Mustelidae |
|
Lutrinae
(Otters) |
Aonyx
|
African Clawless Otter (A. capensis) · Oriental Small-clawed Otter (A. cinerea)
|
|
|
|
|
Hydrictis
|
Spotted-necked Otter (H. maculicollis)
|
|
Lontra
|
|
|
Lutra
|
|
|
Lutrogale
|
Smooth-coated Otter (L. perspicillata)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustelinae
(including Badgers) |
Arctonyx
|
Hog Badger (A. collaris)
|
|
Eira
|
Tayra (E. barbara)
|
|
Galictis
|
Lesser Grison (G. cuja) · Greater Grison (G. vittata)
|
|
|
|
|
Ictonyx
|
Saharan Striped Polecat (I. libyca) · Striped Polecat (I. striatus)
|
|
Lyncodon
|
Patagonian Weasel (L. patagonicus)
|
|
Martes
(Martens)
|
|
|
Meles
|
|
|
|
|
|
Melogale
(Ferret-badgers)
|
Bornean Ferret-badger (M. everetti) · Chinese Ferret-badger (M. moschata) · Javan Ferret-badger (M. orientalis) · Burmese Ferret-badger (M. personata)
|
|
|
Amazon Weasel ( M. africana) · Mountain Weasel ( M. altaica) · Ermine (M. erminea) · Steppe Polecat ( M. eversmannii) · Colombian Weasel ( M. felipei) · Long-tailed Weasel ( M. frenata) · Japanese Weasel ( M. itatsi) · Yellow-bellied Weasel ( M. kathiah) · European Mink ( M. lutreola) · Indonesian Mountain Weasel ( M. lutreolina) · Black-footed Ferret ( M. nigripes) · Least Weasel (M. nivalis) · Malayan Weasel ( M. nudipes) · European Polecat (M. putorius) · Siberian Weasel ( M. sibirica) · Back-striped Weasel ( M. strigidorsa) · Egyptian Weasel ( M. subpalmata)
|
|
Neovison
(Minks)
|
American Mink (N. vison)
|
|
Poecilogale
|
African Striped Weasel (P. albinucha)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|