{"id":14118,"date":"2023-03-21T02:58:25","date_gmt":"2023-03-21T01:58:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/the-wild-cats-by-r-roger-breton-and-nancy-j-creek\/"},"modified":"2023-03-21T02:58:25","modified_gmt":"2023-03-21T01:58:25","slug":"the-wild-cats-by-r-roger-breton-and-nancy-j-creek","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/the-wild-cats-by-r-roger-breton-and-nancy-j-creek\/","title":{"rendered":"The Wild Cats By R. Roger Breton And Nancy J. Creek"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>                                    THE WILD CATS<\/p>\n<p>                                   R. Roger Breton<br \/>\n                                    Nancy J Creek<\/p>\n<p>                            &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;<\/p>\n<p>                                  The Family of Cats<\/p>\n<p>        Technically, domestic cats belong to the class mammalia (mammals), the<br \/>\n        order carnivora (meat-eaters), the family felidae (cats), the genus<br \/>\n        felis (lesser cats), and the species cattus (domestic cats):  that&#8217;s<br \/>\n        our cat, felis cattus.<\/p>\n<p>        There are three genera of the family felidae:  panthera, the large or<br \/>\n        greater cats; acinonyx, the cheetahs; and felis, the small or lesser<br \/>\n        cats.  A fourth genus, smilodon, the saber-toothed tigers, just missed<br \/>\n        by only 12,000 years:  almost no time at all, geologically speaking.<br \/>\n        Since there is of necessity a lot of discussion about cat sizes using<br \/>\n        the terms &#8220;large&#8221; and &#8220;small,&#8221; we shall use the terms &#8220;greater&#8221; and<br \/>\n        &#8220;lesser&#8221; in reference to the genera.<\/p>\n<p>        The terms &#8220;greater cats&#8221; and &#8220;lesser cats&#8221; refer to size only in<br \/>\n        general:  the larger lesser cats are larger than the smaller greater<br \/>\n        cats.  The most obvious difference between the two genera is that<br \/>\n        greater cats can roar and the lesser cats cannot.  The ability to roar<br \/>\n        is determined by the structure of the throat:  most significantly, the<br \/>\n        small bones (the hyoid bones) that support the larynx.  In the greater<br \/>\n        cats, these bones have been partially replaced by cartilage, allowing<br \/>\n        extraordinary flexibility of the throat and enabling the cat to roar.<br \/>\n        In the lesser cats, these bones are rigid and roaring is impossible.<br \/>\n        Contrast the deep-throated, deafening roar of a lion to the snarling<br \/>\n        cough of a puma.<\/p>\n<p>        The genera are divided into species.  Generally speaking, two dissimi-<br \/>\n        lar animals belonging to the same genus are considered as belonging to<br \/>\n        different species if they do not interbreed and produce viable off-<br \/>\n        spring:  they either physically cannot interbreed, such as a puma and<br \/>\n        a housecat (boggles the mind, not to mention the housecat!); would not<br \/>\n        interbreed naturally, such as a jaguar and a leopard, which just don&#8217;t<br \/>\n        have the right smells and signals to inspire mating; or their off-<br \/>\n        spring would be sterile, such as a lion and a tiger, whose offspring<br \/>\n        is a &#8220;liger&#8221; if the father is a lion or a &#8220;tigon&#8221; if he is a tiger,<br \/>\n        but is always sterile.  Conversely, if two such animals do interbreed<br \/>\n        and produce viable offspring, they naturally and quickly become the<br \/>\n        same species even if they weren&#8217;t to start with &#8212; interbreeding will<br \/>\n        do that sort of thing &#8212; though they may maintain enough differences<br \/>\n        to be classed as separate subspecies.<\/p>\n<p>        There are some notable exceptions to this rule, particularly where man<br \/>\n        has interfered.  The species Geoffroy&#8217;s cat, for example, can physi-<br \/>\n        cally mate with the domestic cat and produce viable offspring, but<br \/>\n        would not normally do so in the wild, as the smells and signals are<br \/>\n        wrong and the mating instinct would not be triggered.  Man has suc-<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 1<\/p>\n<p>        cessfully circumvented this, however, and produced viable offspring in<br \/>\n        a attempt to produce cats with wild-cat patterns.  Such hybrid off-<br \/>\n        spring are usually treated as a subspecies of one species or the<br \/>\n        other, based upon dominant characteristics:  so far, only new subspe-<br \/>\n        cies of Geoffroy&#8217;s cat have been produced, not new domestic cats.<br \/>\n        This is not the case with other hybrids, most notably the Bengal is a<br \/>\n        domestic cat-leopard cat hybrid.<\/p>\n<p>        Differing species come about through isolation.  If some members of a<br \/>\n        species become separated from the main body of their species by dis-<br \/>\n        tance or natural obstruction, they will eventually evolve into a<br \/>\n        different species, losing the ability to interbreed.  All members of<br \/>\n        the genus felis, subgenus felis, have a somewhat complex relationship<br \/>\n        to each other.  The parent species in this group is felis sylvestris,<br \/>\n        the European wildcat, who first evolved some 600,000 years or so ago<br \/>\n        in central Europe (where he can still be found).  During the Second<br \/>\n        Ice Age, he extended his domain into Africa and Asia.  As the ice<br \/>\n        receded the seas rose and the climates changed, the immigrant species<br \/>\n        became isolated from each other by water, deserts, and mountains.<br \/>\n        Over time, the isolated subspecies evolved into the Sand Cat, the<br \/>\n        African Wildcat, the Forest Cat, the Black-Footed Cat, and the Chinese<br \/>\n        Desert Cat:  other species also evolved, but failed to survive.<\/p>\n<p>        Species are themselves further divided into subspecies (if wild) or<br \/>\n        breeds (if domesticated):  the two classifications are analogous to<br \/>\n        each other.  We should remember that panthera leo azandica (the Congo<br \/>\n        Lion) has exactly the same relationship to panthera leo that Siamese<br \/>\n        Cat has to felis cattus.  Don&#8217;t be fooled by the Latin:  if a zoolo-<br \/>\n        gist set up a &#8220;zoo&#8221; of domestic cats, he&#8217;d find a Latin or Greek word<br \/>\n        for &#8220;Siamese,&#8221; tack it on the end of &#8220;felis cattus,&#8221; and call it a<br \/>\n        subspecies.  It would still be a breed.<\/p>\n<p>        All felids, regardless of genus or species, have certain basic things<br \/>\n        in common.  In appearance, they all look like cats.  While this may be<br \/>\n        arguable in the case of the Jaguarundi and, to a lesser degree, the<br \/>\n        Flat-Headed Cat, it is definitely not true of some other families:<br \/>\n        all members of the canid (dog) family, for example, do not look like<br \/>\n        dogs (not even all dogs look like dogs!).<\/p>\n<p>        Besides a similarity of appearance, all cats have retractable claws:<br \/>\n        even the cheetah, the most primitive of all modern cats, has partial-<br \/>\n        ly-retractable claws.<\/p>\n<p>        The most cat-unique common characteristic, however, is purring:  all<br \/>\n        cats, and nothing but cats, purr.  For some time it was believed that<br \/>\n        the greater cats didn&#8217;t purr:  some texts still say this even today.<br \/>\n        This is patently not true, all cats purr:  lions purr, tigers purr,<br \/>\n        cheetahs purr, leopards purr, jaguars purr, pumas purr, bobcats purr,<br \/>\n        domestic cats purr; all cats purr, without exception.  This alone<br \/>\n        proves common ancestry:  probably pseudailurus, 28 million years ago,<br \/>\n        or dinictis, 40 million years ago, depending upon whether saber-<br \/>\n        toothed tigers purred, something our own Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon<br \/>\n        ancestors failed to note.  There are also a whole slew of internal<br \/>\n        similarities, as would be expected.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 2<\/p>\n<p>        Besides the biological similarities among cats, which one would ex-<br \/>\n        pect, there is one other distinguishing characteristics.  Wherever it<br \/>\n        has adapted, in whatever ecological niche in whatever part of the<br \/>\n        world, the cat reigns supreme among carnivores in its size class.  It<br \/>\n        is the penultimate hunter, with a finely-honed stalking and killing<br \/>\n        ability that other carnivores can only dream about.  The typical<br \/>\n        member of family felidae scores in 30 percent of its hunts:  no other<br \/>\n        carnivore, including man, comes close.  It is also a merciful hunter,<br \/>\n        killing quickly and cleanly by severing the spinal column of its prey<br \/>\n        and minimizing the pain and suffering.<\/p>\n<p>        Some zoologists break the three genera down further into subgenera<br \/>\n        based upon subtle or newly-discovered differences.  As an example, the<br \/>\n        subgenus leopardus, the South American lesser cats, have 36 chromo-<br \/>\n        somes instead of the usual 38, (probably through a fusion of two<br \/>\n        chromosomal pairs).  This is a major distinction, even though it is<br \/>\n        invisible to the eye and depended upon modern technology for its<br \/>\n        discovery, and is usually considered a legitimate subgenus.  The<br \/>\n        subgenus lynx, on the other hand, is based upon the lynx and its<br \/>\n        relatives having short tails and tufted ears, a more obvious but also<br \/>\n        more trifling distinction.  The subgenus of a wild species is given in<br \/>\n        brackets in the species list, and would replace the genus in nomencla-<br \/>\n        ture:  &#8220;felis [puma] concolor&#8221; may be &#8220;puma concolor&#8221; instead of<br \/>\n        &#8220;felis concolor,&#8221; but never &#8220;felis puma concolor.&#8221;  The relationships<br \/>\n        between subgenera can be clearly seen in the family chart.<\/p>\n<p>        All species of cats have differing subspecies (breeds), not just the<br \/>\n        domestic cat.  There are, for example, nine subspecies of lions:<\/p>\n<p>            Panthera leo azandica:      Congo Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo bleyenberghi:  Bleyenbergh&#8217;s Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo hollisteri:    Hollister&#8217;s Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo massaicus:     Massai Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo persica:       Persian Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo roosevelti:    Roosevelt&#8217;s Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo senegalensis:  Senegal Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo somaliensis:   Somalian Lion<br \/>\n            Panthera leo verneyi:       Verney&#8217;s Lion<\/p>\n<p>        The difference in lion subspecies reflects variations in size, color,<br \/>\n        territory, etc., with the names coming from the discoverer, classifier<br \/>\n        or territory.  The number of recognized subspecies of a wild cat<br \/>\n        species will be given, but individual subspecies will not be named.<\/p>\n<p>        One small footnote:  don&#8217;t let the &#8220;scientific&#8221; name of the various<br \/>\n        cats fool you.  Zoologists are as silly as the rest of us when it<br \/>\n        comes to naming things, but they hide their silliness behind a Latin<br \/>\n        or Greek facade.  As an example, the scientific name for the common<br \/>\n        stripped skunk, mephitis mephitis, translates to &#8220;smelliest of the<br \/>\n        smelly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>        In our own case, the Latin word &#8220;felis,&#8221; generic for &#8220;cat,&#8221; is derived<br \/>\n        from the older Latin word &#8220;felix,&#8221; meaning &#8220;happy,&#8221;  probably because<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 3<\/p>\n<p>        cats are not shy about letting the world know when they are happy,<br \/>\n        which is most of the time:  they purr (purring also makes the cat<br \/>\n        owner feel happy).  This means that &#8220;felis cattus&#8221; could be translated<br \/>\n        as &#8220;happy cat&#8221; or &#8220;purring cat,&#8221; and the family &#8220;felidae&#8221; means &#8220;one<br \/>\n        of those who are happy.&#8221;  Deep stuff here!<\/p>\n<p>        In order to be fair, and to give the zoologists their due, the Romans<br \/>\n        did call just any old cat &#8220;cattus,&#8221; and one of their cats &#8220;felix<br \/>\n        cattus.&#8221;  (No, &#8220;felix cattus&#8221; does not mean &#8220;Felix the Cat,&#8221;  though<br \/>\n        we can see where Otto Messmer may have gotten the name.)<\/p>\n<p>                                  The Species of Cat<\/p>\n<p>        All in all, there are 38 recognized species of cats:  six greater<br \/>\n        cats, panthera; one cheetah, acinonyx; and 31 lesser cats, felis,<br \/>\n        including the domestic cat.  All of them except the domestic cat (and<br \/>\n        even some of those) have one thing in common:  they are wild carni-<br \/>\n        vores and will often bite and scratch when encountered (bigger ones<br \/>\n        may also eat!).  Count your fingers after petting!<\/p>\n<p>        A description of each of the 38 species is given.  Considerable<br \/>\n        thought went into the order in which the species should be listed.<br \/>\n        Most lists give the greater cats, then the cheetah, then the lesser<br \/>\n        cats, with the order within each genus being either the alphabetical<br \/>\n        order of their English or Latin names or the territory in which they<br \/>\n        were first discovered.  None of this seemed to make sense here, so we<br \/>\n        decided to list them by weight and size, largest to smallest.  Alter-<br \/>\n        nate English names are given after the primary name, and subgenera are<br \/>\n        given in brackets.  The weights and lengths shown are for average male<br \/>\n        specimens of the various subspecies of each species:  females tend to<br \/>\n        be slightly smaller.  Please remember that new subspecies, or even new<br \/>\n        species (see the Iriomote cat), may be discovered at any time.<\/p>\n<p>        When taking the domestic cat as a species we intentionally chose to<br \/>\n        use the typical feral cat a a model &#8212; one that has returned to the<br \/>\n        wild state.  Because of random interbreeding among feral domestic<br \/>\n        breeds, the dominance of certain genes, and the non-survival charac-<br \/>\n        teristic of certain traits, there has come to be estabished a definite<br \/>\n        and distinctive species:  the medium sized brown or red mackeral tabby<br \/>\n        shorthair.<\/p>\n<p>        When discussing the subspecies (breeds) of the domestic cat taken as a<br \/>\n        species, it is important to remember that several new breeds are<br \/>\n        created each year, several breeds are discontinued each year, and<br \/>\n        there is no agreement among &#8220;experts&#8221; as to what defines a new breed,<br \/>\n        making the exact number of breeds impossible to compute.  As an exam-<br \/>\n        ple of this disagreement, a blue (grey) British Shorthair is usually<br \/>\n        classed as a separate breed, the British Blue, but a black British<br \/>\n        Shorthair is not.  Overall, there is a definite upward trend in the<br \/>\n        number of cat flavors.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 4<\/p>\n<p>                                        Tiger<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Tiger<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera Tigris<br \/>\n            Weight:      200-500 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   60-72 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        24-36 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  7<\/p>\n<p>        The largest cat and one of the most powerful land carnivores in the<br \/>\n        world (exceeded in strength but not speed by the Kodiak bear), the<br \/>\n        tiger is a massively built cat of awesome size and power, with some<br \/>\n        exceptional individuals reaching 800 pounds.  Its distinctive coat is<br \/>\n        white to orange-brown with black, brown, or grey stripes.  Its small<br \/>\n        round ears have black backs with a central white spot.  The males of<br \/>\n        some subspecies sport side whiskers.<\/p>\n<p>        The tiger may be found in all types of terrain of southern and south-<br \/>\n        eastern Asia and of eastern Asia northward to Mongolia and Siberia,<br \/>\n        where it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks game of all types.<br \/>\n        It is an excellent swimmer.<\/p>\n<p>        The tiger is the only truly striped cat, with a completely non-agouti<br \/>\n        coat.  All other striped cats are tabbies.<\/p>\n<p>                                         Lion<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Lion<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera Leo<br \/>\n            Weight:      300-500 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   96-108 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        24-36 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  9<\/p>\n<p>        The lion is very large cat with a balanced and well-proportioned body<br \/>\n        and a large head.  Its coat varies from tawny to brownish-yellow with<br \/>\n        a black-tipped tail and black patches on its ears.  The males have a<br \/>\n        heavy body-color, brown, or black mane.<\/p>\n<p>        The lion may be found in all parts of Africa south of the Sahara and<br \/>\n        in the Gir Forest of India and, until recently, in all parts of the<br \/>\n        Near East and on the Balkan and Iberian Peninsulas of Europe, where it<br \/>\n        hunts by night or day, from the ground, and seeks game of all types.<br \/>\n        The females do most of the hunting.  It has been known to scavenge.<\/p>\n<p>        The lion is unique in that it is the only wild cat that lives in a<br \/>\n        group, called a pride, consisting of one mature male and any number of<br \/>\n        females, cubs, and immature males.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 5<\/p>\n<p>                                        Jaguar<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Jaguar<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera Onca<br \/>\n            Weight:      90-300 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   72 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        22 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  8<\/p>\n<p>        The jaguar, often incorrectly called a panther (a panther is a leop-<br \/>\n        ard), is a massive and powerfully built cat, with a deep-chested body<br \/>\n        and a large head.  Its coat is yellowish-brown with dark brown spots<br \/>\n        in center-spotted rosettes.  Some individuals are very dark brown,<br \/>\n        almost black, effectively masking their spots.<\/p>\n<p>        The jaguar may be found near water in savannahs and forests in all<br \/>\n        parts of North and South America south of the United States.  The last<br \/>\n        native jaguar in the U.S. died in the early 1960&#8217;s.  It hunts by<br \/>\n        twilight, from the ground, and seeks peccary, capybara, coypu, otter<br \/>\n        and fish.  It is an excellent swimmer.<\/p>\n<p>                                         Puma<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Puma, Mountain Lion, Cougar<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Puma] Concolor<br \/>\n            Weight:      100-200 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   48-60 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        28 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  29<\/p>\n<p>        The largest of the lesser cats, the puma, often incorrectly called a<br \/>\n        panther (a panther is a leopard), is a large and powerful cat with a<br \/>\n        graceful and narrow body and exceptionally strong legs.  It is the<br \/>\n        champion jumper among cats, able to execute a 30 ft. standing broad<br \/>\n        jump or an 18 ft. jump straight up the face of a cliff.  Its head is<br \/>\n        small, with small rounded ears.  Its has a distinctive call midway<br \/>\n        between a cough and a snarl.  Despite its size, it is a lesser cat and<br \/>\n        cannot roar.  Its coat is a uniform tawny color with lighter under-<br \/>\n        parts and white on the chin and throat.  It sports a white moustache.<\/p>\n<p>        The puma was until recently found in all parts of North and South<br \/>\n        America except the arctic, but is rapidly vanishing from large por-<br \/>\n        tions of the U.S. and Canada.  It is strongly territorial, claiming an<br \/>\n        exceptionally wide range, and is solitary even by cat standards,<br \/>\n        avoiding its own kind except to mate.  It hunts by day, primarily from<br \/>\n        the ground but occasionally from high rocks, low cliffs, or trees, and<br \/>\n        seeks deer, sheep, goats, peccary, capybara and other similarly-sized<br \/>\n        game.  It will occasionally stalk livestock when other prey is scarce.<br \/>\n        It avoids humans and their settlements and farms when establishing its<br \/>\n        territory, but is not shy about contact when a human moves into an<br \/>\n        already established territory.  It is intensely curious about every-<br \/>\n        thing in its range, and has been known to enter houses on occasion,<br \/>\n        even while occupied.  In one recorded incident in Arizona, a puma<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 6<\/p>\n<p>        entered a house and stole the roast from the dinner table while the<br \/>\n        couple was sitting there.  They (probably wisely) opted not to move<br \/>\n        nor to challenge its right to do so.<\/p>\n<p>        Old wives tales and Hollywood notwithstanding, there has never been a<br \/>\n        substantiated case of a puma attacking a human, even a child, unless<br \/>\n        cornered, injured, ill, or protecting its cubs.  Hunters&#8217; and ranch-<br \/>\n        ers&#8217; dogs are a different story, and do not fare well upon encounter.<br \/>\n        Unfortunately, the hunters and ranchers usually take the dogs&#8217; side.<\/p>\n<p>        An exceptionally gentle cat for one so large, the puma is easily<br \/>\n        tamed, especially when taken as a cub, and does well in captivity.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Snow Leopard<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Snow Leopard, Ounce<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera [Uncia] Uncia<br \/>\n            Weight:      150 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   41 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        35 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        A rare cat, the snow leopard is a large, graceful cat with a long,<br \/>\n        lithe build.  Its coat is smoke grey with dark grey spots in broken<br \/>\n        rosettes.<\/p>\n<p>        The snow leopard may be found above the tree line in the high moun-<br \/>\n        tains of central Asia, where it hunts by day, from the ground, and<br \/>\n        seeks grazing animals and large birds.<\/p>\n<p>        Little is known about this cat, partly because of its rarity and<br \/>\n        partly because of its habitat:  only a brave, mountain-climbing zoolo-<br \/>\n        gist can study it in the wild.  Some zoologists classify the snow<br \/>\n        leopard as a lesser cat, sticking with the genus uncia, as its hyoid<br \/>\n        bones are intermediate between the two extremes:  it can roar softly<br \/>\n        (though louder than the clouded leopard).  Most zoologists, however,<br \/>\n        place it in the genus panthera, and classify it as a greater cat.<\/p>\n<p>                                       Leopard<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Leopard, Panther<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera Pardus<br \/>\n            Weight:      90-150 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   48 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        24 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  15<\/p>\n<p>        The leopard or panther is a large, graceful cat with a long, lithe<br \/>\n        build.  Its coat is pale brown to yellowish-brown with dark brown<br \/>\n        spots in rosettes.  Some individuals are very dark brown, almost<br \/>\n        black, effectively masking their spots and producing the famous black<br \/>\n        panther.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 7<\/p>\n<p>        The leopard may be found in all parts of Africa south of the Sahara,<br \/>\n        Asia east of the Indus and south of Mongolia, and Indonesia, where it<br \/>\n        hunts by night, by twilight, and by day in late afternoon and early<br \/>\n        morning, from the ground or from trees, often dropping silently on its<br \/>\n        prey, and seeks large or small game of almost any type.<\/p>\n<p>        A solid-colored leaopard or &#8220;black panther&#8221; is often of a more agres-<br \/>\n        sive nature than those with a spotted coat.  This is because normal<br \/>\n        spotted mothers tend to dislike solid-color cubs, often driving them<br \/>\n        away prematurely.  This ostracism produces mean-tempered, intolerant<br \/>\n        individuals, just as it does with humans.  No satisfactory explanation<br \/>\n        has ever been given for this phenomenon.<\/p>\n<p>                                       Cheetah<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Cheetah<br \/>\n            Species:     Acinonyx Jubatus<br \/>\n            Weight:      65-110 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   48-60 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        20-30 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  6<\/p>\n<p>        The most primitive of all cats, evolving some 18 million years ago,<br \/>\n        the cheetah is a tall, slim, long-legged cat, built along the lines of<br \/>\n        the greyhound.  Its claws are only semi-retractable, and it has a<br \/>\n        distinctly dog-like muzzle.  Its coat is yellowish-brown with dark<br \/>\n        brown spots and a long white-tipped tail.<\/p>\n<p>        The cheetah may be found in open grassland and nearby forests in all<br \/>\n        parts of Africa, the Middle East, and south-central Asia, where it<br \/>\n        hunts by day, from the ground, and seeks antelope and other grazing<br \/>\n        animals.<\/p>\n<p>        The cheetah is unique in several ways, and is the only member of genus<br \/>\n        Acinonyx.  It is easily tamed and trained to the hunt and is the<br \/>\n        fastest four-footed animal on Earth, often achieving speeds in excess<br \/>\n        of 80 mph for short distances.<\/p>\n<p>        There are some few zoologists who classify the cheetah as a lesser<br \/>\n        cat, on the basis that it is definitely not a greater cat (can&#8217;t roar)<br \/>\n        and must therefore be a lesser cat.  These zoologists belong to the<br \/>\n        &#8220;you can&#8217;t have a genus of one&#8221; school of biology.  In our opinion,<br \/>\n        this is total nonsense.  The world abounds with single-species genera<br \/>\n        &#8212; the tuatara, a New Zealand reptile unlike any other reptile that<br \/>\n        isn&#8217;t already extinct and roughly related to other reptiles the way<br \/>\n        the platypus is related to other mammals, comes to mind.  Some of<br \/>\n        these zoologists do write books, however, and do get their ideas in<br \/>\n        print, which is why we mention them at all.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 8<\/p>\n<p>                                   Clouded Leopard<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Clouded Leopard, Mint Leopard<br \/>\n            Species:     Panthera [Neofelis] Nebulosa<br \/>\n            Weight:      40-66 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   36-42 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        30-36 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  4<\/p>\n<p>        The clouded leopard is a slim, well proportioned, medium-sized cat.<br \/>\n        Its coat varies from pale brown to rich brown with large irregular<br \/>\n        blotches, said by the Chinese to resemble the shape of mint leaves<br \/>\n        (hence the name mint leopard in China).  Its head is banded, with<br \/>\n        small, round, black ears with a central grey spot.  Its underparts are<br \/>\n        pale or white, and its tail is ringed in black.<\/p>\n<p>        The clouded leopard may be found in the dense forest and scrub of<br \/>\n        southern and southeastern Asia, where it hunts by night or day, from<br \/>\n        trees, dropping silently down onto its prey, and seeks medium-sized<br \/>\n        game of all types.  Completely at home in the trees, this cat is one<br \/>\n        of the best climbers &#8212; the margay is arguably better, but is nowhere<br \/>\n        near the same size &#8212; and can run up and down a tree like a huge<br \/>\n        squirrel.<\/p>\n<p>        Some zoologists classify the clouded leopard as a lesser cat, sticking<br \/>\n        with the genus neofelis, as its hyoid bones are intermediate between<br \/>\n        the two extremes:  it can only roar softly.  Most zoologists, however,<br \/>\n        place it in the genus panthera, and classify it as a greater cat.<\/p>\n<p>                                    Northern Lynx<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Northern Lynx, Lynx<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Lynx] Lynx<br \/>\n            Weight:      30-65 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   40 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        7 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  9<\/p>\n<p>        The northern lynx is a large cat with a powerful body, short, sturdy<br \/>\n        legs, and a very short tail.  It has a large head with side whiskers<br \/>\n        and large tufted ears.  Its coat is yellowish-brown fading to white on<br \/>\n        its undersides, and may be spotted with dark brown:  the presence of<br \/>\n        spots and the spotting pattern varies considerably between subspecies.<\/p>\n<p>        The northern lynx may be found in the pine forests and thick scrub<br \/>\n        south of the arctic in North America, Europe and Asia, where it hunts<br \/>\n        by night, from the ground, and seeks rodents, birds, fish, small deer,<br \/>\n        goats, and sheep.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 9<\/p>\n<p>                                     Spanish Lynx<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Spanish Lynx<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Lynx] Pardina<br \/>\n            Weight:      54 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   38 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        57 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        Very similar to but slightly smaller than the northern lynx, the<br \/>\n        Spanish lynx is also a large cat with a powerful body, short, sturdy<br \/>\n        legs, and a very short tail.  It too has a large head with side whisk-<br \/>\n        ers and large tufted ears.  It has exceptionally keen eyesight, the<br \/>\n        best of all the cats.  Its coat is yellowish-brown fading to white on<br \/>\n        its undersides, and is strikingly spotted with black.<\/p>\n<p>        The Spanish lynx may be found in the pine forests of the Iberian<br \/>\n        peninsula, where it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks ro-<br \/>\n        dents, birds, fish, termites, and small deer, goats, and sheep.<\/p>\n<p>                                       Caracal<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Caracal, Caracal Lynx<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Caracal] Caracal<br \/>\n            Weight:      35-50 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   29 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        9 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  9<\/p>\n<p>        The largest African lesser cat and an exceptional climber and jumper,<br \/>\n        the caracal is a slenderly built cat with long legs and a short,<br \/>\n        sharply tapered tail.  Its coat is reddish-brown with distinctive<br \/>\n        tufted ears and white markings around its eyes and on its throat,<br \/>\n        chin, and belly.<\/p>\n<p>        The caracal may be found in the deserts, scrub, savannahs, mountains<br \/>\n        and rocky areas of Africa, Arabia, and southern Asia as far east as<br \/>\n        India, where it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks small<br \/>\n        animals, birds of all sizes, and the young of the larger grazing<br \/>\n        animals.<\/p>\n<p>                                        Serval<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Serval<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Leptailurus] Serval<br \/>\n            Weight:      30-40 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   32 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        16 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  14<\/p>\n<p>        The serval is a lightly built cat, with long legs, large ears, and<br \/>\n        short tail.  Its coat is light brown with dark spots, black-tipped<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 10<\/p>\n<p>        tail, and black ears with distinctive white spots.<\/p>\n<p>        The serval may be found near water and in the reedbeds and marshes of<br \/>\n        Algeria and Africa south of the Sahara, where it hunts by night, from<br \/>\n        the ground, and seeks rodents, reptiles, birds, and small deer.<\/p>\n<p>                                  African Golden Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        African Golden Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Profelis] Aurata<br \/>\n            Weight:      30-40 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   29 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  2<\/p>\n<p>        The African golden cat has a sturdy build, with long legs, large paws,<br \/>\n        small head and short tail.  Its coat has a wide range of colors, from<br \/>\n        chestnut brown to silver grey, with white on its cheeks, chin, chest<br \/>\n        belly and insides of its legs.<\/p>\n<p>        The African golden cat may be found in the dense forests and scrub of<br \/>\n        central and west Africa, where it hunts by night and twilight, from<br \/>\n        the ground, and seeks rodents, birds, and small deer.<\/p>\n<p>                                        Bobcat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Bobcat, Bay Lynx, Wildcat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Lynx] Rufus<br \/>\n            Weight:      15-35 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   30 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        6 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  11<\/p>\n<p>        The bobcat is proportioned like a small lynx, with a powerful body,<br \/>\n        short, sturdy legs, and a very short tail.  Its fairly large head has<br \/>\n        large, sharply-pointed ears, tufted in some subspecies.  Its buff coat<br \/>\n        fades to white on its undersides and is barred and spotted on its<br \/>\n        flanks, belly and legs with dark brown or black.  The backs of its<br \/>\n        ears are black.<\/p>\n<p>        The bobcat may be found in most terrain, short of actual desert, of<br \/>\n        western North America from British Columbia to central Mexico.  It is<br \/>\n        very territorial, where it hunts by night, from the ground or trees,<br \/>\n        and seeks rabbits, gophers, and other small animals.<\/p>\n<p>        Prior to the settlement of its territory by Europeans, the bobcat<br \/>\n        ranged over a much wider area of the U.S. and Canada.  This is the<br \/>\n        wildcat that a mountain man was supposed to be able to whup his weight<br \/>\n        in.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 11<\/p>\n<p>                                      Jungle Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Jungle Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Chaus<br \/>\n            Weight:      16-30 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   24-30 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        9-12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  9<\/p>\n<p>        Possibly one of the ancestors of the domestic cat, the jungle cat is a<br \/>\n        well proportioned cat with a sturdy build and definite cat-like move-<br \/>\n        ments and actions.  It is definitely a mutated felis sylvestris.  Its<br \/>\n        coat is sandy grey to tawny red with pale stripped-tabby body markings<br \/>\n        (more pronounced in kittens) with darker, almost black tabby-type<br \/>\n        facial markings, dorsal stripe, and tail tip.<\/p>\n<p>        The jungle cat may be found in the jungles, woodlands, scrub, reedbeds<br \/>\n        and marshes of Egypt and southern Asia.  Often found living in and<br \/>\n        around human settlements and farms.  It hunts by night or day, from<br \/>\n        the ground, and seeks rodents, reptiles, birds, and other small ani-<br \/>\n        mals.<\/p>\n<p>                                        Ocelot<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Ocelot<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Leopardus] Pardalis<br \/>\n            Weight:      12-30 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   35 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        16 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  11<\/p>\n<p>        The ocelot is a medium-sized cat with a graceful body, long, powerful<br \/>\n        legs, and a short tail.  Its coat is a soft creamy yellow with strik-<br \/>\n        ing center-spotted rosettes of black with a soft brown color inside<br \/>\n        the rosette.  The rosettes often link up to form chains.  Its head is<br \/>\n        boldly marked with black spots and bars.  Its tail is heavily ringed<br \/>\n        with a black tip.<\/p>\n<p>        The ocelot may be found in any type of cover from thorny chapparal to<br \/>\n        jungle, but never in the open, of North and South America south of the<br \/>\n        United States, where it hunts by night, from the ground, but spends<br \/>\n        the day secure in high trees, and seeks birds, deer, peccary, coati<br \/>\n        mundi, agouti and other small mammals.<\/p>\n<p>        This cat has a severe handicap in being one of the most beautiful of<br \/>\n        all cats.  As a result it has been hunted to near-extinction for its<br \/>\n        pelt, in spite of being a protected species in most countries.  It is<br \/>\n        believed that not all subspecies currently remain.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 12<\/p>\n<p>                                   European Wildcat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        European Wildcat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Silvestris<br \/>\n            Weight:      10-30 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   22-28 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  7<\/p>\n<p>        An older species, evolving about 650,000 years ago, the European<br \/>\n        wildcat is in the direct ancestral line of the domestic cat (our cats)<br \/>\n        and is the parent species for several related small cats, most notably<br \/>\n        felis lybica, which it strongly resembles.  It is about one-third<br \/>\n        larger than a feral domestic cat and resembles it in both build and<br \/>\n        coat.  It is often mistaken for a large tabby with disastrous results,<br \/>\n        as it is not at all friendly (somewhat vicious, in fact).  Its coat is<br \/>\n        long and thick, to protect it from harsh European winters, and is<br \/>\n        colored and marked identically to your basic brown stripped-tabby<br \/>\n        alleycat.<\/p>\n<p>        The European wildcat may be found in all parts of Europe and Asia west<br \/>\n        of the Urals and the Caspian except the arctic.  It is not afraid of<br \/>\n        humans and will live on the outskirts of cities scavenging in garbage<br \/>\n        bins (much as do raccoons and coyotes in the U.S.).  It is very pro-<br \/>\n        lific and a long way from being endangered, even though its territory<br \/>\n        is diminishing as more and more of Europe is converted to city and<br \/>\n        suburbs.  It hunts by twilight, from the ground, and seeks rats,<br \/>\n        squirrels, birds, small deer, domestic cats, small dogs, and poultry.<br \/>\n        It is usually considered vermin by farmers and villagers.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Fishing Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Fishing Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Prionailurus] Viverrina<br \/>\n            Weight:      25 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   32 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        The fishing cat has a long, sinuous body, almost civit-like in appear-<br \/>\n        ance, with relatively short legs and a somewhat flattened tail.  It<br \/>\n        forepaws have unusually long phalanges (toes) and claws.  Its claws<br \/>\n        extend considerably from their sheaths even when fully retracted.  All<br \/>\n        four feet are webbed.  Its coat is light brown with dark brown irregu-<br \/>\n        lar spots, fading to white underneath.  The backs of its ears are<br \/>\n        black with a central white spot.<\/p>\n<p>        The fishing cat may be found in the marshes and swamps of southern and<br \/>\n        southeastern Asia.  It avoids human settlements, where it hunts by<br \/>\n        day, in the water and from the ground, and seeks fish, crayfish,<br \/>\n        mollusks, rodents, reptiles and other small animals.  It is the best<br \/>\n        swimmer of all cats, catching fish by pursuit and using its long claws<br \/>\n        as fishhooks.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 13<\/p>\n<p>                                Temminck&#8217;s Golden Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Temminck&#8217;s Golden Cat, Asiatic Golden Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Profelis] Temmincki<br \/>\n            Weight:      14-25 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   31-35 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        19-20 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  3<\/p>\n<p>        Temminck&#8217;s golden cat is a medium-sized, well-proportioned cat with<br \/>\n        short round ears, about twice the size of a cat.  It has a strikingly<br \/>\n        beautiful appearance, with a deep-golden coat fading to white on its<br \/>\n        undersides.  In some subspecies, there is an absence of spotting,<br \/>\n        while in others faint brown spotting is evidenced.  An occasional<br \/>\n        individual will be very dark brown, almost black.  There is a distinc-<br \/>\n        tive grey patch behind each ear, while a white line bordered in black<br \/>\n        runs from each eye to the top of its head.<\/p>\n<p>        Temminck&#8217;s golden cat may be found in the forests and rocky areas of<br \/>\n        Asia from the Himalayas to the Maylay Peninsula, where it hunts by<br \/>\n        day, from the ground, and seeks game of all types up to the size of<br \/>\n        small deer.<\/p>\n<p>                                   Flat-Headed Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Flat-Headed Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Ictailurus] Planiceps<br \/>\n            Weight:      12-18 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   22 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        7 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        A very unusual cat, the flat-headed cat is omniverous, being equally<br \/>\n        content with prey or vegetation.  It is about the size of the domestic<br \/>\n        cat, but with a very long body, short legs and tail, and a broad, flat<br \/>\n        head with a ridge formed by the nasal bones and small round ears.  Its<br \/>\n        coat is reddish-brown to dark brown, with a yellowish-brown face and<br \/>\n        white underparts.  The underside of its tail is yellowish-brown.<\/p>\n<p>        The flat-headed cat may be found in the forests and scrub of south-<br \/>\n        eastern Asia, often near human habitation and farms, where it hunts by<br \/>\n        night, from the ground, and seeks rodents, frogs, other small animals,<br \/>\n        fruit, sweet potatoes, and other legumes.  It often raids garbage cans<br \/>\n        and gardens, and fills the ecological niche that in other parts of the<br \/>\n        world is filled by raccoons, weasels, and stoats.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 14<\/p>\n<p>                                   African Wildcat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        African Wildcat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Lybica<br \/>\n            Weight:      10-18 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   24 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  11<\/p>\n<p>        The primary ancestor of the domestic cat (and our cats), whom it<br \/>\n        resembles, the average African wildcat has a more sturdy build and is<br \/>\n        slightly larger than the average domestic cat &#8212; though not as large<br \/>\n        as some of the bred-for-size subspecies.  Its coat is light brown to<br \/>\n        light yellowish-brown with stripped-tabby markings.  Cats with darker<br \/>\n        tabby markings, similar to tabby cats, are found in forested areas,<br \/>\n        while cats with paler markings are found in grasslands.<\/p>\n<p>        The African wildcat may be found throughout Africa and the Middle<br \/>\n        East, Asia as far east as India, and the islands of Corsica, Sardinia,<br \/>\n        and Majorca.  It is often found around human settlements and farms.<br \/>\n        It hunts by night, usually on the ground but sometimes from trees and<br \/>\n        bushes, and seeks rodents, reptiles, birds and insects.<\/p>\n<p>        The African wildcat is very easily tamed, especially when taken as a<br \/>\n        kitten,  and many farmers in its range have African wildcats in lieu<br \/>\n        of domestic cats.<\/p>\n<p>                                        Margay<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Margay, Marguey, Tree Ocelot<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Leopardus] Wiedii<br \/>\n            Weight:      9-18 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   26 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        16 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  11<\/p>\n<p>        The margay has a slim, graceful body with long legs and a long tail.<br \/>\n        Its coat is a light yellowish-brown with striking dark brown irregular<br \/>\n        spots, which may form rosettes.  Its tail is ringed.<\/p>\n<p>        The margay may be found in the forests of the Yucatan and Central and<br \/>\n        South America, and one subspecies near the Texas-Mexico border, where<br \/>\n        it hunts by day, from trees, and seeks small mammals, birds, tree<br \/>\n        frogs, and lizards.<\/p>\n<p>        The margay is without question the best climber of all cats.  It runs<br \/>\n        up and down the trees like a squirrel, virtually living in them from<br \/>\n        birth to death &#8212; which is almost never by falling.  So well adapted<br \/>\n        is the margay to arboreal life that its feet are extraordinarily<br \/>\n        flexible, with the hind feet capable of turning completely around.<br \/>\n        Its claws are also exceptionally strong and sharp.  It is not unusual<br \/>\n        for a margay to be discovered hanging head downward from one hind foot<br \/>\n        while it catches a quick nap seventy feet in the air.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 15<\/p>\n<p>                                      Jaguarundi<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Jaguarundi, Jaguarondi, Weasel Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Herpailurus] Yagouaroundi<br \/>\n            Weight:      16 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   26 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        18 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  8<\/p>\n<p>        Often mistaken for an otter because of its peculiar shape and appear-<br \/>\n        ance, the jaguarundi has a long sinuous body, very short legs, a<br \/>\n        flattened tail, and a long flattened head with a short nose and very<br \/>\n        small low-set round ears.  Similar to the flat-headed cat but even<br \/>\n        more extreme in appearance.    Its coat comes in two color phases,<br \/>\n        brownish-grey to black and bright reddish-brown, which readily inter-<br \/>\n        breed, producing young of both phases in their litter.  Both phases<br \/>\n        shade to white on their undersides.<\/p>\n<p>        The jaguarundi may be found in lowland forests, scrub and chapparal of<br \/>\n        South America and North America south of the southwestern United<br \/>\n        States, where it hunts by night and by day in the afternoon, from the<br \/>\n        ground, and seeks mainly birds and the occasional rodent.  It fills<br \/>\n        the same ecological niche as the raccoon, weasel, otter, or<br \/>\n        stoat, and occasionally has territorial clashes with them.<\/p>\n<p>                                  Feral Domestic Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Feral Domestic Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Cattus &#8212; formerly Felis Domestica<br \/>\n            Weight:      8-15 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   12-24 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        5-10 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  Legion.<\/p>\n<p>        Due to the fact that this is a truly domesticated animal, subject to<br \/>\n        human breeding programs, normal criteria do not apply.  Many of the<br \/>\n        &#8220;breeds&#8221; (subspecies) are merely color variations of the same basic<br \/>\n        breeds.  Programs are also under way to introduce new and exotic<br \/>\n        colors and body types, as well as to produce smaller and larger varie-<br \/>\n        ties of existing breeds.    When deprived of human companionship, the<br \/>\n        domestic cat will revert to the wild state:  such a cat is said to be<br \/>\n        feral.  When this occurs, it will, within the course of a few genera-<br \/>\n        tions, lose most of its man-introduced and artificially-maintained<br \/>\n        recessive characteristics, and stabilize as a small, muscular cat of a<br \/>\n        definite type and coloration.  This body type and coloration can be<br \/>\n        seen in the common alleycat, which is merely a feral or semiferal cat<br \/>\n        still residing around people.<\/p>\n<p>        Among those features that quickly vanish are the Persian skull struc-<br \/>\n        ture, the Siamese body type, long hair, and other recessive character-<br \/>\n        istics.  The Persian flat-faced (Pekingese) skull inhibits the sense<br \/>\n        of smell and decreases visual acuity.  Cats of this type left on their<br \/>\n        own seldom live long enough to breed.  The long, lean Siamese body<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 16<\/p>\n<p>        type, while graceful, simply cannot withstand a good cat-fight with a<br \/>\n        15 pound alleycat, and will fail during territorial and courtship<br \/>\n        battles.<\/p>\n<p>        Several coat characteristics desired by man, such as Siamese colora-<br \/>\n        tion or long, silky hair, are recessive and will quickly disappear<br \/>\n        unless constantly maintained by careful breeding.  Feral cats do<br \/>\n        partake in a selective breeding program, but their only criteria is<br \/>\n        survival.<\/p>\n<p>        The ordinary mackerel-stripped tabby in black-brown or orange are the<br \/>\n        dominant coat patterns and colors, though there will always be some<br \/>\n        individuals with solid black or dark-brown coats.  All other patterns<br \/>\n        and colors are recessive and will vanish.<\/p>\n<p>        Non-albino white is a dominant color, but is poor camouflage for a<br \/>\n        hunter (except, perhaps, in the snow):  white cats are often deaf,<br \/>\n        which is definitely not a survival characteristic.<\/p>\n<p>        The feral domestic cat will continue to be found around man.  The<br \/>\n        reasons for this are not as obvious as one would think.  While a good<br \/>\n        hunter and fighter, a feral cat is simply not in a class with its wild<br \/>\n        cousins.  When it leaves the haunts of mankind it is bound to meet up<br \/>\n        with a bobcat, a European wildcat, or some other kin, and the reunion<br \/>\n        is usually very hard on the feral cat.  By becoming domesticated and<br \/>\n        accepting cathood, felis cattus has given up his independence forever.<\/p>\n<p>        There is an exception to this.  Where man has already driven away<br \/>\n        competing wild cats, the feral cat quickly rises to the top of the<br \/>\n        ecological heap for his size class.<\/p>\n<p>        The feral cat will hunt by day or night, from the ground, and will<br \/>\n        seek mice, rats, squirrels, birds, lizards, and other small animals.<br \/>\n        In times of famine it will become cannibalistic.<\/p>\n<p>        Unlike other wild cats, with the exception of the lion, the feral cat<br \/>\n        will often be found in groups, called clowders.  The feral clowder<br \/>\n        bonds together for mutual comfort and affection, but will seldom hunt<br \/>\n        together or band in mutual defense against a common enemy.  It is as<br \/>\n        though his connection with man has introduced the domestic cat, feral<br \/>\n        or otherwise, to the benefits of love and companionship, but has not<br \/>\n        yet overcome the solitary hunting and fighting instincts.<\/p>\n<p>        A word of caution:  don&#8217;t be fooled by appearance into thinking of a<br \/>\n        feral domestic cat as someone&#8217;s pet.  Even though it may look exactly<br \/>\n        like Old-Tom-Sleeping-by-the-Fire, it is a truly wild animal and may<br \/>\n        very quickly and very efficiently shred an extended hand or arm.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 17<\/p>\n<p>                                     Mountain Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Mountain Cat, Andean Highland Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Oreailurus] Jocobita<br \/>\n            Weight:      8-15 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   23 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        14 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        The mountain cat is similar to a cat in size and build.  Its coat is<br \/>\n        of a very fine silky texture, about two inches in length, and of a<br \/>\n        pale silver or reddish-grey color fading to white on the undersides.<br \/>\n        It has faint brown or ochre tabby-like markings on its body and flanks<br \/>\n        which may darken to almost black on its undersides and legs.  Its tail<br \/>\n        is ringed with dark brown or black, with the tip always the body<br \/>\n        color.  Its ears are grey.<\/p>\n<p>        The mountain cat may be found in arid regions of the high Andes,<br \/>\n        sometimes above the snow line, of Peru and northern Chile and Argenti-<br \/>\n        na, where it hunts by day, from the ground, and seeks chinchilla,<br \/>\n        viscacha, and other small mammals.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Leopard cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Leopard Cat, Bengal Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Prionailurus] Bengalensis<br \/>\n            Weight:      7-15 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   25-32 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        10-14 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  7<\/p>\n<p>        The leopard cat is cat sized and shaped, with a well-balanced carriage<br \/>\n        and build.  Its coat varies in ground color from grey to red with<br \/>\n        white or very light underparts.  It is randomly patterned with dark<br \/>\n        brown or black spots over its entire body.  Its head has strong black<br \/>\n        and white striped markings.<\/p>\n<p>        The leopard cat may be found all over southern and central Asia from<br \/>\n        India to the Philippines, Mongolia, Manchuria, Siberia and Japan,<br \/>\n        where it hunts by night or day, from trees, and seeks game birds,<br \/>\n        fish, squirrels, hares, and other small animals.<\/p>\n<p>        One interesting fact about the leopard cat is that is the only wild<br \/>\n        cat to be successfully used in a domestic-wild hybrid breeding program<br \/>\n        in recent years, giving rise to the beautiful and mild-mannered Bengal<br \/>\n        breed.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 18<\/p>\n<p>                                      Pampas Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Pampas Cat, Grass Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Lynchailurus] Colocolo<br \/>\n            Weight:      8-14 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   24 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  7<\/p>\n<p>        The pampas cat is a small cat, about the size of a cat, with a broad<br \/>\n        face and large pointed ears.  Its coat varies from a silvery grey,<br \/>\n        through all tones of yellow and yellowish-brown, to a light brown,<br \/>\n        with the flanks, legs, and tail banded with a darker variation of the<br \/>\n        body color.<\/p>\n<p>        The pampas cat may be found in the open grasslands and high pampas of<br \/>\n        southern South America east of the Andes, where it hunts by night,<br \/>\n        from the ground, and seeks birds, cavies and other small animals.<\/p>\n<p>                                  Chinese Desert Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Chinese Desert Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Bieti<br \/>\n            Weight:      12 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   30 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  3<\/p>\n<p>        A very rare cat, the Chinese desert cat is a well-proportioned cat-<br \/>\n        sized cat.  Like the sand cat, the soles of its feet are covered with<br \/>\n        thick mats of fur to protect it from the hot sands.  Its coat is sandy<br \/>\n        brown with distinctive darker brown spots set in wide-spaced vertical<br \/>\n        rows.  Its undersides are very pale.<\/p>\n<p>        The Chinese desert cat may be found in the deserts, steppes, scrub and<br \/>\n        mountains of Mongolia and China, where it hunts by night, from the<br \/>\n        ground, and seeks small rodents and reptiles.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Iriomote Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Iriomote Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Mayailurus] Iriomotensis<br \/>\n            Weight:      12 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   23 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        8 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        A very rare cat, discovered in 1964, the Iriomote cat has a long body<br \/>\n        with short legs and tail.  Its coat is brown with lines on its neck<br \/>\n        that end at its shoulders and black spots that merge into lines on its<br \/>\n        flanks.  Its ears are black with white spots.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 19<\/p>\n<p>        The Iriomote cat may be found only on the small island of Iriomote,<br \/>\n        off the coast of Taiwan, where it hunts by night, from trees, and<br \/>\n        seeks birds and small mammals.<\/p>\n<p>        The discovery so recently of the Iriomote cat caused a considerable<br \/>\n        stir in zoological circles.  It should be taken as notice that we<br \/>\n        certainly don&#8217;t know all there is to know.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Marbled Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Marbled Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Pardofelis] Marmorata<br \/>\n            Weight:      12 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   21 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        15 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  2<\/p>\n<p>        A rare cat, the marbled cat resembles a long-tailed cat in size and<br \/>\n        build.  Its beautiful, striking coat is pale brown, with irregular<br \/>\n        slightly darker brown blotches sharply outlined in dark brown or<br \/>\n        black.  Its long cylindrical tail is full from rump to tip and carries<br \/>\n        its body pattern.<\/p>\n<p>        The marbled cat may be found in the forests of the Maylay peninsula,<br \/>\n        Sumatra, Borneo and some neighboring small islands, where it hunts by<br \/>\n        day, from trees, and seeks birds and eggs.<\/p>\n<p>                                     Pallas&#8217; Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Pallas&#8217; Cat, Manul<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Otocolobus] Manul<br \/>\n            Weight:      7-12 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   22 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        10 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  3<\/p>\n<p>        The oldest living species of cat, evolving some 10 million years ago,<br \/>\n        Pallas&#8217; cat is similar to the lynx in facial structure, with a large,<br \/>\n        sturdy body and short legs.  Its head is short and broad, with large<br \/>\n        round eyes and blunt wide-set ears.  Its long, silky coat varies in<br \/>\n        color from light grey to russet brown, with white tips to its hairs<br \/>\n        giving a sparkling, almost irridescent appearance.  There are dark<br \/>\n        lines on its cheeks, rings on its tail, and its lips, chin, and throat<br \/>\n        are white.<\/p>\n<p>        The Pallas&#8217; cat may be found on the rocky plateaux and river banks of<br \/>\n        central Asia, where it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks<br \/>\n        small mammals and birds.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 20<\/p>\n<p>                                  Rusty-Spotted Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Rusty-Spotted Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Prionailurus] Rubiginosa<br \/>\n            Weight:      6-9 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   17 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        7 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  2<\/p>\n<p>        The rusty-spotted cat is a small cat with small round ears and a short<br \/>\n        tail.  Its soft, short coat is grey with a reddish tinge on top and a<br \/>\n        pale underside.  There are reddish spots scattered randomly over its<br \/>\n        body and reddish stripes on its head.  Its face has distinctive white<br \/>\n        and dark markings.  The soles of its feet are black.<\/p>\n<p>        The rusty-spotted cat may be found in the forests, scrub, dried river-<br \/>\n        beds and drainage systems of India and Sri Lanka, where it hunts by<br \/>\n        night, from the ground, and seeks small mammals and birds.<\/p>\n<p>                                      Tiger Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Tiger Cat, Tiger Ocelot<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Leopardus] Tigrina<br \/>\n            Weight:      5-8 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   22 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        13 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  4<\/p>\n<p>        The tiger cat has a slim, graceful body with long legs and a long<br \/>\n        tail.  Its coat is a light yellowish-brown with striking dark brown<br \/>\n        spots, which may form rosettes or chains of rosettes.  Its tail is<br \/>\n        ringed.<\/p>\n<p>        The tiger cat may be found in the forests of Central and South Ameri-<br \/>\n        ca, where it hunts by day and by twilight, from trees, and seeks small<br \/>\n        rodents and birds.<\/p>\n<p>                                    Geoffroy&#8217;s Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Geoffroy&#8217;s Cat, Geoffroy&#8217;s Ocelot<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Leopardus] Geoffroyi<br \/>\n            Weight:      6 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   20 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  5<\/p>\n<p>        The Geoffroy&#8217;s cat is a small cat with a well-proportioned body and<br \/>\n        head.  Its coat varies from silver grey to ochre and is covered all<br \/>\n        over with equally-placed small dark brown or black spots.  On the<br \/>\n        shoulders and flanks of some individuals the spots may merge to form<br \/>\n        rosettes or bars.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 21<\/p>\n<p>        The Geoffroy&#8217;s cat may be found in the open brushlands and scrub of<br \/>\n        South America south of the Amazon basin and East of the Andes, where<br \/>\n        it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks small mammals and birds.<\/p>\n<p>        The Geoffroy&#8217;s cat is an exceptionally mild-tempered cat, and has been<br \/>\n        bred with the domestic cat in an effort to produce a tame but wild-<br \/>\n        looking hybrid.<\/p>\n<p>                                       Sand Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Sand Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Margarita<br \/>\n            Weight:      5-6 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   20 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        12 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  4<\/p>\n<p>        The sand cat is a small cat with short legs and a very broad head with<br \/>\n        low-set ears and full cheeks.  The soles of its feet are protected<br \/>\n        from hot sands by having a thick mat of fur.  Its coat is a plain<br \/>\n        yellowish-brown to greyish-brown, slightly darker towards its spine<br \/>\n        and lighter underneath.<\/p>\n<p>        The sand cat may be found in the semi-desert regions of northern<br \/>\n        African and the Middle East, where it hunts by night and twilight,<br \/>\n        from the ground, and seeks small rodents and reptiles.<\/p>\n<p>                                       Bay Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Bay Cat, Bornean Red Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Pardofelis] Badia<br \/>\n            Weight:      5 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   20 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        15 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  1<\/p>\n<p>        A small, very rare cat, the bay cat has a slender body with an excep-<br \/>\n        tionally long tail and a round head with small rounded ears.  Its coat<br \/>\n        is reddish-brown (chestnut) with a pale undersides and significantly<br \/>\n        darker ears.  There are faint spots on its undersides and limbs and<br \/>\n        suggestions of lines in its face.<\/p>\n<p>        The bay cat may be found only in rocky and scrub areas of the island<br \/>\n        of Borneo, where it hunts by night, from the ground, and seeks small<br \/>\n        rodents and birds.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 22<\/p>\n<p>                                        Kodkod<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Kodkod, Huina<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis [Oncifelis] Guigna<br \/>\n            Weight:      4.5 lbs<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   18 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        8 in. body<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  2<\/p>\n<p>        The kodkod is the smallest cat in the Western Hemisphere.  Its coat is<br \/>\n        buff with heavy black spots.  There are black bands on its legs, and<br \/>\n        its ears are black with a white spot.<\/p>\n<p>        The kodkod may be found in the forests of Chile and Patagonia, where<br \/>\n        it hunts by night, from the ground though it is an excellent climber,<br \/>\n        and seeks small rodents and birds.<\/p>\n<p>                                   Black-Footed Cat<\/p>\n<p>            Name:        Black-Footed Cat<br \/>\n            Species:     Felis Negripes<br \/>\n            Weight:      2.5-4.5 pounds<br \/>\n            Head\/Body:   14-18 inches<br \/>\n            Tail:        6-7 inches<br \/>\n            Subspecies:  2<\/p>\n<p>        The black-footed cat is the smallest African cat, possibly the small-<br \/>\n        est cat in the world.  Its coat is light brown, slightly darker on<br \/>\n        top, with dark brown or black spots, streaked on its cheeks, throat,<br \/>\n        chest and belly, and with transverse bars on its forlegs and haunches.<br \/>\n        Its feet have black soles.<\/p>\n<p>        The black-footed cat may be found in the deserts and savannahs of<br \/>\n        southern Africa, where it hunts by night and twilight, from the<br \/>\n        ground, and seeks small rodents, birds, reptiles, and insects.<\/p>\n<p>        &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<br \/>\n        The Wild Cats                                                  Page 23<\/p>\n<div class='watch-action'><div class='watch-position align-right'><div class='action-like'><a class='lbg-style1 like-14118 jlk' href='javascript:void(0)' data-task='like' data-post_id='14118' data-nonce='72e055e984' rel='nofollow'><img class='wti-pixel' src='https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-content\/plugins\/wti-like-post\/images\/pixel.gif' title='Like' \/><span class='lc-14118 lc'>0<\/span><\/a><\/div><\/div> <div class='status-14118 status align-right'><\/div><\/div><div class='wti-clear'><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>THE WILD CATS R. Roger Breton Nancy J Creek &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212; The Family of Cats Technically, domestic cats&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[27],"class_list":["post-14118","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-othernonsense","tag-english","wpcat-7-id"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14118","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=14118"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14118\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":14119,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14118\/revisions\/14119"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=14118"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=14118"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.graviton.at\/letterswaplibrary\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=14118"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}