You can sometimes smell the Edinburgh binturong now they have moved enclosures to one more exposed to the open air - and popcorn is indeed an apt descriptor.
Seems to me the only ones who use the term "bearcat" live within the influence of the University of Cincinnati. Universally called a binturong otherwise.
You won't be familiar with the Daily Mail, but they have a low opinion of most people, including their own readers, and are unlikely to present them with a foreign-sounding word if there's another they can put in - being as they are a) patronising and unscientific and b) xenophobic. I'm also surprised they didn't try to claim binturongs gave you cancer or that the young animal was let out by illegal immigrants.
I'm also surprised they didn't try to claim binturongs gave you cancer or that the young animal was let out by illegal immigrants.
Sorry but I didn't understand one word of that. If you are saying it is fake then here.
I also hope that me being the only one who voted bearcat makes me sound stupid.
Horror at zoo as lions kill escaped baby bearcat - AOL Travel UK
EDIT: Reading again, looks like it came from the Sun originally.
To add to the confusion red pandas used to be called bearcats occasionally.
I just call them Gerald.
if it was a case of changing names then by rights the giant panda should have to change because its the red panda that is the original owner of the name (supposedly from Nepalese). The giant panda was named after the red panda (hence "giant").I think Ailurus fulgens' tag was "cat-bear". Put to bed, very wisely, before 1939. Although IF it really isn't very closely related to Ailuropoda melanoleuca maybe it needs another common name?
not at all. I nominate "Chinese bear" instead of giant panda. I'm sure that will catch hold....
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not everyone sees the world in black and white Pygathrix!Pygathrix said:The Chinese name is bei-shung which means white bear - could they not see that it is clearly black-and-white???
not everyone sees the world in black and white Pygathrix!