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Leopard
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Leopard
(Panthera pardus)
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Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Panthera
Species: P. pardus
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Distribution
Map
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Conservation
Status:
Lower risk
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The
solitary leopard is an elusive and cautious animal,
difficult to see in the wild despite being one of the four
'big cats' of the genus Panthera. A nocturnal and arboreal
predator -and an accomplished climber-, leopards are highly
successful hunters, so silent they can reach for their prey's
throat without being noticed. During the day it's possible
to see them resting in a tree or on a large rock.
Leopards range in size from one to almost
two metres long, and weigh between 60 and 70 kg. The leopard
is a sexually dimorphic species, with females being typically
around two-thirds the size of males. Most leopards are light
tan or fawn with black spots, but their coat color is highly
variable. The spots tend to be smaller on the head, and larger
with pale centres on the body.
Originally, it was thought that a leopard
was a hybrid between a lion and a panther, and the leopard's
common name derives from this belief; leo is the Latin for
lion, and pard is an old term meaning panther. In fact, a
"panther" can be any of several species of large
felid. In North America panther means puma and in South America
a panther is a jaguar. Elsewhere in the world a panther is
a leopard. Early naturalists distinguished between leopards
and panthers not by color (a common misconception), but by
the length of the tail - panthers having longer tails than
pards (leopards).
Leopards are highly successful predators
that hunt a wider variety of African prey than do other big
cats from Africa, often feeding on insects, rodents, and fish,
as well as such larger game as antelope. Like domestic cats,
but unlike the other great cats, they are known to jump from
perches onto prey animals. Large size with the efficiency
of the smaller cats makes them extremely dangerous to humans
and dogs. In much of its range in Africa leopards compete
with animals such as the Spotted
Hyena, wild
dogs and the lion
for prey, and it is not uncommon for them to be chased away
from their own kills by other top predators.
Like domestic cats, leopards usually hunt
at night or at dawn or dusk. They will stalk their prey before
making a short run to catch it. They kill mostly by suffocation,
by holding onto the animal's throat, though with smaller animals
they may break the neck. Some leopards will carry their prey
up a tree to avoid losing it to lions and hyenas. They have
been observed carrying prey up to three times their own body
weight into trees, demonstrating their great strength and
power. Opportunistic hunters, leopards will hunt at any time
of day or night if they come across suitable prey. Quite often
they can make more than one kill in a day, in which case they
cache the first kill while stalking their next victim.
Prior to the human-induced changes
of the last few hundred years, Leopards were the most widely
distributed of all felids other than the domestic cat: they
were found through most of Africa (with the exception of the
Sahara Desert), as well as parts of Asia Minor and the Middle
East, India, Pakistan, China, Siberia, much of mainland South-East
Asia, and the islands of Java, Zanzibar, and Sri Lanka. The
leopard is doing surprisingly well for a large predator. It
is estimated that there are as many as 500,000 leopards in
Sub-Saharan Africa alone. But like many other big cats, leopards
are increasingly under threat of habitat loss and are facing
increased hunting pressure.
With excerpts from Wikipedia's
Leopard page. Photo by Gerry
Cole, displayed under a Creative
Commons licence.
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Mara Animals
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