t.
One aspect of her study surprised Dr. Mellen. She had assumed that the less interaction cats had with their keepers, the better they would breed. What she found was that the opposite was the case. The more time a keeper spent interacting with the cats in his or her care, the better the chance of reproduction. She concluded that unless small cats feel comfortable with their human caretakers they are not as likely to be successful breeders.
She also stated that the most reproductively successful males were those which were confident around females - just like humans I guess.
Yes and the wild Cheetah is a good case in point
and how do the ones at Perth fit into the picture relatedness-wise ?
As someone mentioned Howletts' clouded leopards and confident males - Prague's pair of clouded leopards (in Prague since 2006 from Howletts) gave birth two litters already (December 2006 and March(or April) 2008). They have been quite hideous, I don't know how often keepers visit them, but they were very aggressive during their first litter if anyone barely occur in sight. The male was with the female during their first litter and during the seond one the cub was in danger because its mother prefered a company of the male rather than caring of the youngster. So I guess the male should be confidentGood point, Pertinax.
She also stated; (again just common sense I suppose,) that the most reproductively successful males were those which were confident around females - just like humans I guess.
To quote Dr. Mellen,"Successful males avidly pursued females,following, approaching, sniffing them, responding to aggressive swipes by staying just out of reach"(sounds like me and my wife!)"rolling on their backs and neck rubbing." Reproductively unsuccessful males showed either extreme aggression to the female or anxiously ignored her.