R

Black Amur Leopard

I think you meant to put just "black leopard," NOT "black amur leopard." It looks like that zoo has a good cat collection - love the golden cat shots.
 
I believe at least one black Amur leopard was bred at Cotswold WP , could be this one ?
 
Cats are one thing I know quite a bit about, and I can tell you with a high degree of certainty that there is no such thing as a black amur leopard. If the one mentioned was born to allegedly amur parents (as per the link), it means they were NOT pureblooded amurs. Up until recently, zoos bred animals with no regard to subspecies, so there are a lot of mixed genes out there. I assume Thrigby is not participating in the leopard EEP as I'm sure they would never allow crossbreeding an amur to a black.
 
That black leopard on the picture IS a part of the Amur leopard EEP. But you are right, it has got quite a high percentage of Nort Chinese leopard blood. On the other hand, most animals in EEP are not 100% pure Amurs.
 
North China leopards are not melanistic either.

A slightly rash sophism.

Why assume that North Chinese (or Amur) leopards can not be melanistic-or rather, that there might not be a secret carrier or two of the apt recessive allele in the population?
Apparently, the likeliness to exhibit the melanistic colour morph is smaller in the more Northern leopard subspecies than in, say, some populations of the Indo-Chinese leopard. Yet this does not outrule the possibility that an Amur or North Chinese black panther can occur as a rare exception of the rule.
 

Media information

Category
Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens
Added by
Richie Hell
Date added
View count
14,571
Comment count
23
Rating
0.00 star(s) 0 ratings

Share this media

Back
Top