Jordan-Jaguar97
Well-Known Member
Well a new species has arrived from the RSCC, sandcats there the first Exmoor have ever had. In other news the male puma has been named Niko.
What are the chances it will be some of the stock from RSCC turning up here yet again?
I believe the pair of pumas that RSCC had bred , I think last year , the cub(s)? went to Wingham for hand-rearing .
A pair of Caracal have now gone on show. A male from RSCC and a female from a park in Belgium, they have been on site for several months but have been offshow until now whilst the enclosure was built and the female went through her six months quarentine
Fantastic, I'm all for variety in UK zoos (which Exmoor does superbly) and Caracals are a UK rarity and a personal favourite.
I assume RSCC (fairly) recently brought them in and moved them on rather than having ever displayed them themselves (I can never recall seeing them there)?
I went down there on Tuesday and saw both - they are a very splendid young pair and about my favourite medium-sized cat. They now have a pair of tapirs (the male, Denzil, came down from Bristol) and with any luck they should have young next year.
Several posts have mentioned black leopards at Exmoor Zoo. Can anyone please provide me with the scientific name of black leopards?
no, they are just a colour morph. Just curious: what do you think they would be a hybrid of?.... technically,they maybe a subspecies or hybrid.
no, they are just a colour morph. Just curious: what do you think they would be a hybrid of?
Thank you for your reply. I know there's no such species or subspecies commonly called the black leopard. I didn't know exactly what people referred to when writing "black leopard". I'm happy to know they're just referring to melanic morphs of Panthera pardus.Panthera pardus, same as other leopards - they are a colour morph, not a seperate species or subspecies.
I'm interested to learn why you use the word "panther".Hi TLDave,
I don't wish to sound like I'm teaching you to suck eggs, technically,they maybe a subspecies or hybrid. Black panthers/leopards are more common in Asia,particularly Malaysia and I would suspect they may have been found in the rainforests of Central and West Africa,including Kenya. Otherwise in their more northerly range they appear as the spotted morph as well as in their southern African and south east asian range. Of all the big cats they have the vastest range, adapting and living in a variety of environments.God love them.Cheers
Do you have any reference to support your statement? There is some disagreement about the number of Panthera pardus ssp. so I'm just curious why you've said there's nine of them.There are 9 subspecies of Leopard.
Cheers