Posted on December 31, 2012
https://www.avma.org/news/javmanews/pages/130115l.aspx
The AVMA has strengthened its opposition to declawing captive exotic and other wild indigenous cats for nonmedical reasons by condemning the practice.
Posted on December 31, 2012
https://www.avma.org/news/javmanews/pages/130115l.aspx
The AVMA has strengthened its opposition to declawing captive exotic and other wild indigenous cats for nonmedical reasons by condemning the practice.
By Daily Mail Reporter
UPDATED:10:13 GMT, 10 June 2011
The fur is literally flying in this extraordinary set of photos when a fight erupts among a group of cheetahs.
One of the cats leaps four feet in the air during the remarkable confrontation between two males.
The bruising encounter was a harsh lesson for the younger cheetah, who had been challenged by the older male.
Jump around: The bruising encounter was a harsh lesson for the younger cheetah, challenged by the older male
High jump: One of the cats leaps 4ft in the air during the dramatic confrontation between two males
The youngster was given a rough ride as its mother stood back with his sister – a sign that she wanted her son to take care of himself.
British photographer Elliott Neep captured the moments the family of three were approached by the cheetah, in Ngorongoro Crater Conservation Area, in Tanzania.
Elliott, 36, from Wantage, in Oxfordshire, said: ‘We spotted three cheetahs resting in the shade.
‘They were not settled and seemed very agitated. Their body language told me that something was wrong.
‘Then, in the shade of a nearby tree just a few feet away, we could see a fourth cheetah.
‘We tried to figure out what was happening but it was not clear. A young cheetah rose from the ground and immediately, the cheetah under the tree pounced and lashed out at him.
‘The youngster flipped onto its back in a state of submission and the big male leapt over.
‘As soon as the big male moved, I started firing the shutter. I just had a sudden instinct that a fight was imminent.
Take that: The encounter unfolds, including the high-jumping cheetah leaping in the air
‘The situation quickly unravelled and the scene became clear. This was an adult male attempting to push out a female’s full-grown cubs to mate.
‘After the dust settled, the big male came face to face with the youngster and began sounding a long drawn-out meow.
‘It was similar to the sound two domestic cats make when they have a territorial dispute in the garden.
‘The young male began to chirp to its mother for support. But she did not intervene – for me, a clear sign that she had finished raising them and it was time for them to leave.’ He added: ‘We left with the four cheetahs still grouped together, but exhausted and tired under the midday sun.
‘The sequence looked great on the camera and had a massive grin on my face.
‘When I reviewed it later on the big screen, the grin was even wider as I could now see the fur literally flying when the cheetah was in mid-air.’
Fur flying: The youngster was given a rough ride as its mother stood back with his sister – a sign that she wanted her son to take care of himself
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Wild-Cats-World/122586544451718
Clouded leopards are true nocturnal cats. In the late afternoon when it is getting cooler and darker they come out of their hiding place and start getting active until early morning. During daytime they are sleeping and they hide so well you can hardly see them.
A cheetah’s whiskers are significantly less developed than those of other cats, including the nocturnal big cats such as lions and leopards. A cheetah depends far more on sight than on other tactile signals.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Wild-for-Wildlife-and-Nature/279792438707552
Jungle cats are solitary in nature. They rest in other animals’ abandoned
Jungle cats can climb trees. Like most cats, they utilize not only sight and hearing while hunting, but also their sense of smell. While running, they tend to sway from side to side. They mostly hunt for rodents, frogs, birds, hares, squirrels, juvenile wild pigs, as well as various reptiles, including turtles and snakes. Near human settlements, they feed on domestic chickens and ducks. They catch fish while diving, but mostly swim in order to disguise their scent trails, or to escape threats, such as dogs or humans. They are generally hard to tame, even if taken into captivity at a young age. Like most other cats, they hunt by stalking and ambushing their prey, and they use reeds or tall grass as cover. They are adept at leaping, and sometimes attempt to catch birds in flight. Although they can run at up to 32 kilometres per hour (20 mph), they rarely pursue prey that escapes their initial pounce.
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m.phys.org
Sep 20, Biology/Plants & Animals

Feral cats in Northern California have enabled researchers to unlock the biological secret behind a rare, striped cheetah found only in sub-Saharan Africa, according to researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine, the National Cancer Institute and HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology in Huntsville, Alabama. The study is the first to identify a molecular basis of coat patterning in mammals.
The scientists found that the two felines share a biological mechanism responsible for both the elegant stripes on the tabby cat and the cheetah‘s normally dappled coat. Dramatic changes to the normal patterns occur when this pathway is disrupted: The resulting house cat has swirled patches of color rather than orderly stripes, and the normally spotted cheetah sports thick, dark lines down its back.
“Mutation of a single gene causes stripes to become blotches, and spots to become stripes,” said Greg Barsh, MD, PhD, emeritus professor of genetics and of pediatrics at Stanford and an investigator at the HudsonAlpha Institute.
The differences are so pronounced that biologists at first thought that cheetahs with the mutated gene belonged to an entirely different species. The rare animals became known as “king cheetahs,” while affected tabby cats received the less-regal moniker of “blotched.” (The more familiar, striped cat is known as a mackerel tabby.)
The study will be published Sept. 21 in Science. Christopher Kaelin, PhD, a senior scientist in the Barsh laboratory, is the co-first author; Xiao Xu PhD, from the National Cancer Institute-Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research and the Sichuan Key Laboratory of Conservation Biology on Endangered Wildlife in Sichuan, China, is the other co-first author. Marilyn Menotti-Raymond, PhD, of NCI-Frederick is the senior author.
Barsh and his lab members have spent decades investigating how traditional laboratory animals such as mice develop specific coat colors. His previous work identified a variety of biologically important pathways that control more than just hair or skin color, and have been linked to brain degeneration, anemia and bone marrow failure. But laboratory mice don’t display the pattern variation seen in many mammals.
“We were motivated by a basic question,” said Barsh of the turn to the study of big (and little) cats. “How do periodic patterns like stripes and spots in mammals arise? What generates them? How are they maintained? What is their biological and evolutionary significance? It’s kind of surprising how little is known. Until now, there’s been no obvious biological explanation for cheetah spots or the stripes on tigers, zebras or even the ordinary house cat.”
The research relied primarily on DNA samples from feral cats in Northern California captured for sterilization and release, on tissue samples provided by the City of Huntsville Animal Services group, and on small skin biopsies and blood samples from captive and wild South African and Namibian cheetahs. It also hinged on the recent availability of the whole-genome sequence of the domestic cat. (Menotti-Raymond’s research focuses on the genomic analysis of the domestic cat to better understand many human diseases.)

“The Laboratory of Genomic Diversity at the National Cancer Institute has long championed the cat as an animal model of human disease,” said Menotti-Raymond. “Studying color variation in cats provides the opportunity to uncover new principles of gene action and interaction that may have unexpected applications to understanding developmental and morphologic variation in natural populations, including humans.”
Comparing gene sequences of feral cats with different patterns allowed Kaelin and Xu to identify mutations in a gene they dubbed Taqpep associated with the blotched tabby markings: 58 of 58 blotched tabbies had a mutation in each of its two copies of Taqpep, while 51 of 51 mackerel tabbies had a least one unmutated version.
Taqpep encodes a protease normally found in the cell membrane, but that can also be cleaved to allow it to diffuse outside the cell. This ability to float freely and interact with other molecules in the extracellular soup is a key component of a principle called reaction diffusion proposed by the famous computer scientist Alan Turing, PhD, in 1952 as a way to explain how periodic patterns (like stripes and spots) can arise out of randomness.
“Turing realized that, under specific conditions, diffusible ‘activator’ and ‘inhibitor’ molecules can self-organize into a variety of periodic patterns,” said Barsh. “We are excited about the idea that Taqpep might be an entry point to understand if, and how, reaction-diffusion mechanisms can explain ‘how the leopard got its spots.’”
After nailing down Taqpep’s role in tabby stripes (and analyzing its sequence in more than 350 other cats of 24 distinct breeds), Kaelin wondered if it might play a similar role in generating and maintaining the spots on wild and captive cheetahs. He obtained blood samples from a king cheetah named Kgosi, a resident of a wildcat education and conservation program in Northern California, and found that Kgosi also had a mutation in Taqpep.
Kaelin next contacted Ann van Dyk, who maintains a cheetah conservation center in South Africa from which all captive king cheetahs, including Kgosi, originate. (Van Dyk was the first to learn, though meticulous breeding records, that the king cheetah pattern is due to a recessive genetic mutation.) Van Dyk obtained DNA samples from all her cheetahs, allowing confirmation that a Taqpep mutation is responsible for the king cheetah pattern.
Mammals aren’t the only animals with patterned hair or skin, obviously. Fish, salamanders and some invertebrates also have stripes and spots. However, there is an essential difference. While the non-mammals simply add stripes or spots as they grow to adulthood, mammals keep the same number and pattern by increasing the surface area of the contrasting colors.
“Somehow, cells in the black stripes know they are in a black stripe and remember that fact throughout the organism’s life,” said Barsh. “We were curious about what’s happening at the boundary between light and dark stripes and spots. How do these spots know to grow with an animal?”
When Kelly McGowan, MD, PhD, a senior scientist in Barsh’s group, studied fetal cat skin after seven weeks of gestation, she found that the tabby pattern begins to arise only when the hair begins to grow. In other words, there are no apparent differences between the cells themselves—only in the color of hair they produce. That suggested that the changes in color are due to differences in the levels of expression of certain genes within the cells.
Lewis Hong, a former graduate student in Barsh’s lab, used a technique he developed called EDGE to identify changes in gene expression levels between black and yellow areas of cheetah skin (obtained under anesthesia). He found several differences, many associated with a pathway influencing the expression of a gene called Edn3. McGowan found that Edn3 mRNA was produced at the base of the follicles making the black hairs. To test their theory, the researchers collaborated with a group at Florida International University to study a yellow-colored laboratory mouse that had been engineered to express Edn3. The coats of the resulting animals were much darker than their unmodified peers.
“This is very strong evidence that Edn3 is a critical regulator of black versus yellow hair in animals,” said Barsh. The researchers hypothesize that expression of Taqpep is required to establish a pattern of stripes or spots in early feline development that is then carried out by Edn3 as the hair grows.
Clearly, not all cats are patterned. In particular, some big adult cats like African lions and mountain lions are distinctive for their lack of color variation even though their cubs are striped. Furthermore, Taqpep mutations are surprisingly common in some non-striped domestic cat breeds like the Abyssinian and the Himalayan.
“We know there’s a mutation that suppresses pattern formation in some cats,” said Barsh. “We’d like to investigate that mechanism as well.”
More information: The research is described in the paper “Specifying and sustaining pigmentation patterns in domestic and wild cats” and will be published in the 21 September issue of Science.
Provided by Stanford University Medical Center
I’m a baby ocelot (Leopardus pardalis). I just wait to recover my health and to find my new home in Senda verde ((www.sendaverde.com.) They told me I need a special cage, food, medicine and exclusive care. Please, would you
I’m very little, I’m the size of a domestic cat. They have taken me away from my mom and my brothers. I hope they haven’t killed them all while they defended me.
I traveled a lot in the dark and I was really afraid! I went to an ugly place where some human were yelling and exchanging things. They also exchanged me for some little papers.
They took me to a building… I was alone! I was afraid! And my mom wasn’t there! They feed me with things I wasn’t supposed to eat, but I was really hungry. I got a stomachache because of that. I miss my mom’s delicious milk. But my nightmare didn’t finish there for me. Everyday I was hurt! These humans didn’t get tired and even thought up some new awful things to hurt my little body. They pull out my claws and cut out my whiskers, my eyebrows too… all my sensor hairs!!!
One afternoon, I heard some voices. I knew they were looking for me. I run to see and they also looked at me!! I heard they were POFOMA and Animales SOS people. I didn’t understand anything about the discussions, but they rescued me from that horrible place. I’m so thankful!!!
Now I’m in some other place. I didn’t find my mommy here, but they cleaned up my little ears, and now I can hear better. My food is still kind of different from the one my mom used to gave me, but I like it and I eat it a lot. After a week I’m recovering my mood and I’m cleaning myself again. I want to play like other kitties, but I trip over the thing I find on my way, it’s really difficult to jump without my whiskers and claws. I really feel like a handicap. I listen they say :”poor little creature, how could they hurt him like that? After you suffered such thing, why are you so tender and obedient?” They also say “It’s so cute! It’s a beautiful cat!”.
Now, during the nights, I sleep on a bed sucking the fingers of the person who’s taking care of me. During the mornings I listen them say that every night I shed tears… do you know what I see in my dreams?
Some WCS doctors visited me and examined me; they took some blood and other fluids from my body. They explained it was to know what diseases the other people and animals infected me since my capture. And this will also help me to heal.
I know I would never be able to go back with my family. I dream about the forest, the wind, also about the rain. Here they talk about a wonderful place where they take care and love wild animals as helpless as me. I want to go to Senda Verde (www.sendaverde.com ) and have my new home. I’m a wild kitty and I need your help! More than 300 wild animals found a good life and they also wait for you to open your heart.
I need a special cage (it costs about 2000 $us), why? Because we, cats, depend on our whiskers and sensor hair to move, any damage to them could make we couldn’t measure distances, or we could crush with things. A cat without sensor hair could hurt his eyes while walking in the weeds, because he couldn’t receive the sign to close them at time. They also could get trapped in narrow places, which not only could be dangerous, but also a life or dead matter in case an enemy is chasing them.
Help with your donation:
* Bank account No: 150-029337 BANCO NACIONAL DE BOLIVIA
Payee Virginia Ossio P SWIFT: BNBOBOLXLPZ
* Paypal: http://www.sendaverde.com/pag/dnow.html
* Paypal: lsv@sendaverde.com
They told me that in Law 1333 (Environment Law) Art. 111 bans the possession of wild animals and penalize the commercialization of those creatures. Supreme Decrees Nº 22641 (Permanent general ban decree) and Nº 25458 (Modified ban), are the ones who talk about wild fauna trade.
Now you know about my story and you know that the man who kidnapped me should be in jail.
Please, everybody must obey the law, so that all of us could live with our parents and brothers. You should think that a wild animal NEVER offers his cubs for adoption. For every wild animal that comes to the illegal market, 9 of the same specie have died.
I, the ocelot, I’m gonna heal and grow up. I hope my claws grow back, not just to defend myself, I want to climb trees, the same as my whiskers and eyelashes to know where I’m stepping, where I walk and jump and not hurting myself with objects that are around me. They don’t defeated me! I’ll grow up to be big, cute and a strong male ocelot! Mommy, you’ll be proud of me!!!
And… by the way… I’M NOT A PET!
http://www.sendaverde.com/pag/dnow.html
* Paypal: lsv@sendaverde.com
They told me that in Law 1333 (Environment Law) Art. 111 bans the possession of wild animals and penalize the commercialization of those creatures. Supreme Decrees Nº 22641 (Permanent general ban decree) and Nº 25458 (Modified ban), are the ones who talk about wild fauna trade.
Now you know about my story and you know that the man who kidnapped me should be in jail.
Please, everybody must obey the law, so that all of us could live with our parents and brothers. You should think that a wild animal NEVER offers his cubs for adoption. For every wild animal that comes to the illegal market, 9 of the same specie have died.
I, the ocelot, I’m gonna heal and grow up. I hope my claws grow back, not just to defend myself, I want to climb trees, the same as my whiskers and eyelashes to know where I’m stepping, where I walk and jump and not hurting myself with objects that are around me. They don’t defeated me! I’ll grow up to be big, cute and a strong male ocelot! Mommy, you’ll be proud of me!!! And… by the way… I’M NOT A PET!” width=”403″ height=”403″ />
The fishing cat kitten is the second to be born at the Curraghs Wildlife parkAn endangered fishing cat kitten has been born at the Curraghs Wildlife Park in the north of the Isle of Man.
A park spokesman said the eight-week animal was one of only 200 living in captivity world-wide.
Fishing cats are an endangered species of cat from Asia, which challenge the common understanding that all cats hate water.
The rare breed is described as “endangered” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Park manager Kathleen Graham said: “Fishing cats are one of the more difficult cat species to breed in captivity as they are easily disturbed.
“This kitten is only one of about 10 born in the past year worldwide, so this is incredibly exciting news.”
The cats have developed webbed feet and live a semi-aquatic lifestyle.
In the wild they can be found from Northern India to Sri Lanka, Burma and across the Thai peninsular to Java and Sumatra.
They are threatened due to a loss of wetland habitat, water pollution and pesticide poisoning, according to the IUCN.
http://animal.discovery.com/tv-shows/untamed-uncut/videos/leopard-attack.htm
When re-releasing animals into the wild there are many things to consider, not the least of which is the speed of a wild cat. This angry leopard was captured while attacking local livestock. After her capture, these national park rangers planned to release her into a preserve where she could hunt out of the way of residents. However, she wasn’t ready to leave her cage.
One of the rangers beings to prod the angry cat, only enraging her further. Suddenly, she bolts from the cage and whips around to attack the ranger. The ranger attempts to escape into a truck, but the cat was too fast. via Animal Planet