Leopard
One of the “big cats”, the leopard is a large spotted feline found in Asian and Africa.
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Panthera
Species: P. pardus
Common Names: Leopard
The leopard lives in savanna and rainforest habitats, where it is typically a solitary animal. They are mostly active at night, though in some areas in Africa they are known to hunt during the day. They are skilled tree climbers, and can jump up to 10 feet up into the air.
Leopards are meat eaters and predators, eating primarily different species of antelopes, monkeys, jackals, foxes and even cheetahs.
In much of their range, leopards overlap with other large predators that they compete with, including lions, hyenas, tigers, cheetahs, and African wild dogs.
Leopards are large wild cats that grow up to six feet long, not including the tail, which can be nearly four feet long. They can be over two feet high at the shoulder and can weigh over 150 pounds. They are members of the “big cat” group that also includes the lion, the tiger, and the jaguar. These muscular cats have large claws, sharp teeth, and the ability to roar.
Leopards are yellowish in coloration with a patterning of black spots on their body. The spots are arranged in groupings called rosettes, due to their rose-like shape.
The leopard is very similar in appearance to another big cat, the jaguar. There are a few ways to tell them apart. Jaguars are more heavily built and muscular, while leopards are more slender and slim. A jaguar’s rosettes also have a black spot in the center, whereas a leopard’s rosettes are arranged in a circle with no center spot. They also differ in their ranges – jaguars are found in the Americas, while leopards are found in Asia and Africa.
Leopards feature in art and folklore going back to ancient times. The leopard was the symbol of the Greek god Dionysus. The Benin empire and Ashanti people of Africa treated the leopard as a symbol of power.
Leopards are occasionally born with a recessive gene that causes increased melanin, resulting in a dark brown, nearly black coat. These are known as “black panthers”. It is estimated that up to 11% of leopards may be black panthers.
The leopard is a Vulnerable species. It is extinct in much of its former range, with habitat destruction and fragmentation being a major threat. Illegal hunting is also damaging to leopard populations.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopard
Macdonald, David W. (editor). (2006). The PrincetonEncyclopedia of Mammals. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
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