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Jungle cat

The jungle cat (Felis chaus), also called reed cat, swamp cat and jungle lynx,[3] is a medium-sized cat native to the Middle East, the Caucasus, South and Southeast Asia and southern China. It inhabits foremost wetlands like swamps, littoral and riparian areas with dense vegetation. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, and is mainly threatened by destruction of wetlands, trapping and poisoning.[1]

Jungle cat
Indian jungle cat
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Feliformia
Family: Felidae
Subfamily: Felinae
Genus: Felis
Species:
F. chaus
Binomial name
Felis chaus
Schreber, 1777
Subspecies
  • Felis chaus affinis Gray, 1830
  • Felis chaus chaus Schreber, 1777
  • Felis chaus fulvidina Thomas, 1928
Distribution of the jungle cat in 2016[1]
Synonyms[2]
List

The jungle cat has a uniformly sandy, reddish-brown or grey fur without spots; melanistic and albino individuals are also known. It is solitary in nature, except during the mating season and mother-kitten families. Adults maintain territories by urine spraying and scent marking. Its preferred prey is small mammals and birds. It hunts by stalking its prey, followed by a sprint or a leap; the ears help in pinpointing the location of prey. Both sexes become sexually mature by the time they are one year old; females enter oestrus from January to March. Mating behaviour is similar to that in the domestic cat: the male pursues the female in oestrus, seizes her by the nape of her neck and mounts her. Gestation lasts nearly two months. Births take place between December and June, though this might vary geographically. Kittens begin to catch their own prey at around six months and leave the mother after eight or nine months.

The species was first described by Johann Anton Güldenstädt in 1776 based on a specimen caught in a Caucasian wetland.[4] Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber gave the jungle cat its present binomial name and is therefore generally considered as binomial authority. Three subspecies are recognised at present.[5]

Taxonomy and phylogeny edit

Taxonomic history edit

 
Illustration of the jungle cat by Joseph Smit, 1874
 
Illustration by Joseph Smit, 1892

The Baltic-German naturalist Johann Anton Güldenstädt was the first scientist who caught a jungle cat near the Terek River at the southern frontier of the Russian empire, a region that he explored in 1768–1775 on behalf of Catherine II of Russia.[6] He described this specimen in 1776 under the name "Chaus".[4][7]

In 1778, Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber used chaus as the species name and is therefore considered the binomial authority.[2][8] Paul Matschie in 1912 and Joel Asaph Allen in 1920 challenged the validity of Güldenstädt's nomenclature, arguing that the name Felis auriculis apice nigro barbatis was not a binomen and therefore improper, and that "chaus" was used as a common name rather than as part of the scientific name.[9]

In the 1820s, Eduard Rüppell collected a female jungle cat near Lake Manzala in the Nile Delta.[10] Thomas Hardwicke's collection of illustrations of Indian wildlife comprises the first drawing of an Indian jungle cat, named the "allied cat" (Felis affinis) by John Edward Gray in 1830.[11] Two years later, Johann Friedrich von Brandt proposed a new species under the name Felis rüppelii, recognising the distinctness of the Egyptian jungle cat.[12] The same year, a stuffed cat was presented at a meeting of the Asiatic Society of Bengal that had been caught in the jungles of Midnapore in West Bengal, India. J. T. Pearson, who donated the specimen, proposed the name Felis kutas, noting that it differed in colouration from Felis chaus.[13] Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire described a jungle cat from the area of Dehra Dun in northern India in 1844 under the name Felis jacquemontii in memory of Victor Jacquemont.[14]

In 1836, Brian Houghton Hodgson proclaimed the red-eared cat commonly found in Nepal to be a lynx and therefore named it Lynchus erythrotus;[15] Edward Frederick Kelaart described the first jungle cat skin from Sri Lanka in 1852 and stressed upon its close resemblance to Hodgson's red cat.[16] William Thomas Blanford pointed out the lynx-like appearance of cat skins and skulls from the plains around Yarkant County and Kashgar when he described Felis shawiana in 1876.[17]

Nikolai Severtzov proposed the generic name Catolynx in 1858,[18] followed by Leopold Fitzinger's suggestion to call it Chaus catolynx in 1869.[19] In 1898, William Edward de Winton proposed to subordinate the specimens from the Caucasus, Persia and Turkestan to Felis chaus typica, and regrouped the lighter built specimens from the Indian subcontinent to F. c. affinis. He renamed the Egyptian jungle cat as F. c. nilotica because Felis rüppelii was already applied to a different cat. A skin collected near Jericho in 1864 led him to describe a new subspecies, F. c. furax, as this skin was smaller than other Egyptian jungle cat skins.[20] A few years later, Alfred Nehring also described a jungle cat skin collected in Palestine, which he named Lynx chrysomelanotis.[21] Reginald Innes Pocock reviewed the nomenclature of felids in 1917 and classified the jungle cat group as part of the genus Felis.[22] Another subspecies, Felis chaus fulvidina, was named by Oldfield Thomas in 1928.[23]

During an expedition to Afghanistan in the 1880s, mammal skins were collected and later presented to the Indian Museum. One cat skin without a skull from the area of Maimanah in the country's north was initially identified as of Felis caudata, but in the absence of skins for comparison the author was not sure whether his identification was correct.[24] In his revision of Asiatic wildcat skins collected in the Zoological Museum of Berlin, the German zoologist Zukowsky reassessed the Maimanah cat skin, and because of its larger size and shorter tail than caudata skins proposed a new species with the scientific name Felis (Felis) maimanah. Zukowsky assumed that the cat inhabits the region south of the Amu Darya River.[25] The Russian zoologist Ognev acknowledged Zukowsky's assessment but also suggested that more material is needed for a definite taxonomic classification of this cat.[26] In his posthumously published monograph about skins and skulls of the genus Felis in the collection of the Natural History Museum, the British taxonomist Pocock referred neither to Zukowsky's appraisal nor to jungle cat skins from Afghanistan.[27] The British natural historian Ellerman and zoologist Morrison-Scott tentatively subordinated the Maimanah cat skin as a subspecies of Felis chaus.[28]

In 1969, the Russian biologist Heptner described a jungle cat from the lower course of the Vakhsh River in Central Asia and proposed the name Felis (Felis) chaus oxiana.[3]

In the 1930s, Pocock reviewed the jungle cat skins and skulls from British India and adjacent countries. Based mainly on differences in fur length and colour he subordinated the zoological specimens from Turkestan to Balochistan to F. c. chaus, the Himalayan ones to F. c. affinis, the ones from Cutch to Bengal under F. c. kutas, and the tawnier ones from Burma under F. c. fulvidina. He newly described six larger skins from Sind as F. c. prateri, and skins with shorter coats from Sri Lanka and southern India as F. c. kelaarti.[29]

Classification edit

In 2005, the authors of Mammal Species of the World recognized 10 subspecies as valid taxa.[2] Since 2017, the Cat Specialist Group considers only three subspecies as valid. Geographical variation of the jungle cat is not yet well understood and needs to be examined.[5] The following table is based on the classification of the species provided in Mammal Species of the World. It also shows the synonyms used in the revision of the Cat Classification Task Force:

Subspecies Synonymous with Distribution
Felis chaus chaus Schreber, 1777
  • F. c. furax de Winton, 1898
  • F. c. nilotica de Winton, 1898
  • F. c. maimanah Zukowsky, 1915
  • F. c. oxiana Heptner, 1969
Caucasus, Turkestan, Iran, Baluchistan and Yarkand, East Turkestan, Palestine, Israel, southern Syria, Iraq, Egypt;[30] northern Afghanistan and south of the Amu Darya River;[31] along the right tributaries of the Amu Darya River, in the lower courses of the Vakhsh River ranging eastwards to the Gissar Valley and slightly beyond Dushanbe.[3]
Felis chaus affinis Gray, 1830
  • F. c. kutas Pearson, 1832
  • F. c. kelaarti Pocock, 1939
  • F. c. prateri Pocock, 1939
  • F. c. valbalala Deraniyagala, 1955
South Asia: Himalayan region ranging from Kashmir and Nepal to Sikkim, Bengal westwards to Kutch and Yunnan, southern India and Sri Lanka[30]
Felis chaus fulvidina Thomas, 1929 Southeast Asia: ranging from Myanmar and Thailand to Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam[30]

Phylogeny edit

In 2006, the phylogenetic relationship of the jungle cat was described as follows:[32][33]

  Felinae  
      
  Acinonyx  

Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus)

    Puma     

Cougar (P. concolor)

Jaguarundi (P. yagouaroundi)

    Felis    

Jungle cat (F. chaus)

Black-footed cat (F. nigripes)

Sand cat (F. margarita)

  wildcats  

European wildcat (F. silvestris silvestris)

Domestic cat (F. catus)

Chinese mountain cat (F. bieti)

African wildcat (F. silvestris lybica)

  Prionailurus  

Leopard cat (P. bengalensis)

Sunda leopard cat (P. javanensis)

Flat-headed cat (P. planiceps)

Fishing cat (P. viverrinus)

Rusty-spotted cat (P. rubiginosus)

  Otocolobus  

Pallas's cat (O. manul)

The jungle cat is a member of the genus Felis within the family Felidae.[2]

Results of an mtDNA analysis of 55 jungle cats from various biogeographic zones in India indicate a high genetic variation and a relatively low differentiation between populations. It appears that the central Indian F. c. kutas population separates the Thar F. c. prateri populations from the rest and also the south Indian F. c. kelaarti populations from the north Indian F. c. affinis ones. The central Indian populations are genetically closer to the southern than to the northern populations.[34]

Characteristics edit

 
A close view of a jungle cat F. c. affinis. Note the plain coat and the dark-tipped hairs.

The jungle cat is a medium-sized, long-legged cat, and the largest of the extant Felis species.[35][36] The head-and-body length is typically between 59 and 76 cm (23 and 30 in). It stands nearly 36 cm (14 in) at shoulder and weighs 2–16 kg (4.4–35.3 lb).[37][38] Its body size decreases from west to east; this was attributed to greater competition from small cats in the east.[39] Its body size shows a similar decrease from the northern latitudes toward the tropics. Sexually dimorphic, females tend to be smaller and lighter than males. The face is long and narrow, with a white muzzle. The large, pointed ears, 4.5–8 cm (1.8–3.1 in) in length and reddish brown on the back, are set close together; a small tuft of black hairs, nearly 15 mm (0.59 in) long, emerges from the tip of both ears. The eyes have yellow irides and elliptical pupils; white lines can be seen around the eye. Dark lines run from the corner of the eyes down the sides of the nose and a dark patch marks the nose.[37][38][40] The skull is fairly broad in the region of the zygomatic arch; hence the head of this cat appears relatively rounder.[3]

The coat, sandy, reddish brown or grey, is uniformly coloured and lacks spots; melanistic and albino individuals have been reported from the Indian subcontinent. White cats observed in the coastline tracts of the southern Western Ghats lacked the red eyes typical of true albinos. A 2014 suggested that their colouration could be attributed to inbreeding.[41] Kittens are striped and spotted, and adults may retain some of the markings. Dark-tipped hairs cover the body, giving the cat a speckled appearance. The belly is generally lighter than the rest of the body and the throat is pale. The fur is denser on the back compared to the underparts. Two moults can be observed in a year; the coat is rougher and lighter in summer than in winter. The insides of the forelegs show four to five rings; faint markings may be seen on the outside. The black-tipped tail, 21 to 36 cm (8.3 to 14.2 in) long, is marked by two to three dark rings on the last third of the length.[38][35] The pawprints measure about 5 cm × 6 cm (2.0 in × 2.4 in); the cat can cover 29 to 32 cm (11 to 13 in) in one step.[3] There is a distinct spinal crest.[40] Because of its long legs, short tail and tuft on the ears, the jungle cat resembles a small lynx.[35] It is larger and more slender than the domestic cat.[42]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
A jungle cat in the Sundarbans, India
 
Female at side of road near Thol Bird Sanctuary, Gujarat, India

The jungle cat is found in the Middle East, the Caucasus, the Indian subcontinent, central and Southeast Asia, Sri Lanka and in southern China.[1][43][40] A habitat generalist, the jungle cat inhabits places with adequate water and dense vegetation, such as swamps, wetlands, littoral and riparian areas, grasslands and shrub. It is common in agricultural lands, such as fields of bean and sugarcane, across its range, and has often been sighted near human settlements. As reeds and tall grasses are typical of its habitat, it is known as "reed cat" or "swamp cat".[44][42] It can thrive even in areas of sparse vegetation, but does not adapt well to cold climates and is rare in areas where snowfall is common.[35] Historical records indicate that it occurs up to elevations of 2,310 m (7,580 ft) in the Himalayas.[29] It shuns rainforests and woodlands.[35][36][42]

In Turkey, it has been recorded in wetlands near Manavgat, in the Akyatan Lagoon on the southern coast and near Lake Eğirdir.[45][46] In the Palestinian territories, it was recorded in the Nablus, Ramallah, Jericho and Jerusalem Governorates in the West Bank during surveys carried out between 2012 and 2016.[47]

In Iran, it inhabits a variety of habitat types from plains and agriculture lands to mountains ranging from elevations of 45 to 4,178 m (148 to 13,707 ft) in at least 23 of 31 provinces of Iran.[48] In Pakistan, it was photographed in Haripur, Dera Ismail Khan, Sialkot Districts and Langh Lake Wildlife Sanctuary.[49]

In India, it is the most common small wild cat.[39] In Nepal, it was recorded in alpine habitat at elevations of 3,000–3,300 m (9,800–10,800 ft) in Annapurna Conservation Area between 2014 and 2016.[50]

In Malaysia, it was recorded in a highly fragmented forest in the Selangor state in 2010.[51]

A few jungle cat mummies were found among the cats in ancient Egypt.[52][53][54]

Ecology and behaviour edit

 
The jungle cat rests during the hot midday hours.

The jungle cat is typically diurnal and hunts throughout the day. Its activity tends to decrease during the hot noon hours. It rests in burrows, grass thickets and scrubs. It often sunbathes on winter days. Jungle cats have been estimated to walk 3–6 km (1.9–3.7 mi) at night, although this likely varies depending on the availability of prey. The behaviour of the jungle cat has not been extensively studied. Solitary in nature, it does not associate with conspecifics, except in the mating season. The only prominent interaction is the mother-kitten bond. Territories are maintained by urine spraying and scent marking; some males have been observed rubbing their cheeks on objects to mark them.[38][35]

Leopards, tigers, bears, crocodiles, dholes, golden jackals, fishing cats, large raptors and snakes are the main predators of the jungle cat.[3][38] The golden jackal in particular can be a major competitor to jungle cats.[55] When it encounters a threat, the jungle cat will vocalise before engaging in attack, producing sounds like small roars – a behavior uncommon for the other members of Felis. The meow of the jungle cat is also somewhat lower than that of a typical domestic cat.[3][38] The jungle cat can host parasites such as Haemaphysalis ticks and Heterophyes trematode species.[56]

Diet and hunting edit

 
The posture in which the jungle cat stalks its prey

Primarily a carnivore, the jungle cat prefers small mammals such as gerbils, hares and rodents. It also hunts birds, fishes, frogs, insects and small snakes. Its prey typically weighs less than 1 kg (2.2 lb), but occasionally includes mammals as large as young gazelles.[38][35] The jungle cat is unusual in that it is partially omnivorous: it eats fruits, especially in winter. In a study carried out in Sariska Tiger Reserve, rodents were found to comprise as much as 95% of its diet.[57]

The jungle cat hunts by stalking its prey, followed by a sprint or a leap; the sharp ears help in pinpointing the location of prey. It uses different techniques to secure prey. The cat has been observed searching for musk rats in their holes. Like the caracal, the jungle cat can perform one or two high leaps into the air to grab birds.[35] It is an efficient climber as well.[3] The jungle cat has been clocked at 32 km/h (20 mph).[36][35] It is an efficient swimmer, and can swim up to 1.5 km (0.93 mi) in water and plunge into water to catch fish.[58]

Reproduction edit

Both sexes become sexually mature by the time they are one year old. Females enter oestrus lasting for about five days, from January to March. In males, spermatogenesis occurs mainly in February and March. In southern Turkmenistan, mating occurs from January to early February. The mating season is marked by noisy fights among males for dominance. Mating behaviour is similar to that in the domestic cat: the male pursues the female in oestrus, seizes her by the nape of her neck and mounts her. Vocalisations and flehmen are prominent during courtship. After a successful copulation, the female gives out a loud cry and reacts with aversion towards her partner. The pair then separate.[3][38]

Gestation lasts nearly two months. Births take place between December and June, though this might vary geographically. Before parturition, the mother prepares a den of grass in an abandoned animal burrow, hollow tree or reed bed.[35] Litters comprise one to five kittens, typically two to three kittens. Females can raise two litters in a year.[3][38] Kittens weigh between 43 and 55 g (1.5 and 1.9 oz) at birth, tending to be much smaller in the wild than in captivity. Initially blind and helpless, they open their eyes at 10 to 13 days of age and are fully weaned by around three months. Males usually do not participate in the raising of kittens; however, in captivity, males appear to be very protective of their offspring. Kittens begin to catch their own prey at around six months and leave the mother after eight or nine months.[3][59] The lifespan of the jungle cat in captivity is 15 to 20 years; this is possibly higher than that in the wild.[38]

Generation length of the jungle cat is 5.2 years.[60]

Threats edit

 
A jungle cat in the Olmense Zoo, Belgium

Major threats to the jungle cat include habitat loss such as the destruction of wetlands, dam construction, environmental pollution, industrialisation and urbanisation. Illegal hunting is a threat in Turkey and Iran. Its rarity in Southeast Asia is possibly due to high levels of hunting.[1] Since the 1960s, populations of the Caucasian jungle cat living along the Caspian Sea and in the Caucasus range states have been rapidly declining. Only small populations persist today. There has been no record in the Astrakhan Nature Reserve in the Volga Delta since the 1980s.[61] It is rare in the Middle East. In Jordan, it is highly affected by the expansion of agricultural areas around the river beds of Yarmouk and Jordan rivers, where farmers hunted and poisoned jungle cats in retaliation for attacking poultry.[62] It is also considered rare and threatened in Afghanistan.[63] India exported jungle cat skins in large numbers, until this trade was banned in 1979; some illegal trade continues in the country, in Egypt and Afghanistan.[1]

In the 1970s, Southeast Asian jungle cats still used to be the most common wild cats near villages in certain parts of northern Thailand and occurred in many protected areas of the country.[64] However, since the early 1990s, jungle cats are rarely encountered and have suffered drastic declines due to hunting and habitat destruction. Today, their official status in the country is critically endangered.[65] In Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, jungle cats have been subject to extensive hunting. Skins are occasionally recorded in border markets, and live individuals, possibly taken from Myanmar or Cambodia, occasionally turn up in the Khao Khieo and Chiang Mai zoos of Thailand.[66]

Conservation edit

The jungle cat is listed under CITES Appendix II. Hunting is prohibited in Bangladesh, China, India, Israel, Myanmar, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Thailand and Turkey. But it does not receive legal protection outside protected areas in Bhutan, Georgia, Laos, Lebanon, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Vietnam.[44]

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Felis chaus at Wikimedia Commons

jungle, jungle, felis, chaus, also, called, reed, swamp, jungle, lynx, medium, sized, native, middle, east, caucasus, south, southeast, asia, southern, china, inhabits, foremost, wetlands, like, swamps, littoral, riparian, areas, with, dense, vegetation, liste. The jungle cat Felis chaus also called reed cat swamp cat and jungle lynx 3 is a medium sized cat native to the Middle East the Caucasus South and Southeast Asia and southern China It inhabits foremost wetlands like swamps littoral and riparian areas with dense vegetation It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List and is mainly threatened by destruction of wetlands trapping and poisoning 1 Jungle catIndian jungle catConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraSuborder FeliformiaFamily FelidaeSubfamily FelinaeGenus FelisSpecies F chausBinomial nameFelis chausSchreber 1777SubspeciesFelis chaus affinis Gray 1830 Felis chaus chaus Schreber 1777 Felis chaus fulvidina Thomas 1928Distribution of the jungle cat in 2016 1 Synonyms 2 List Felis catolynx Pallas 1811F erythrotus Hodgson 1836F ruppelii von Brandt 1832F jacquemontii Geoffroy Saint Hilaire 1844F shawiana Blanford 1876Lynx chrysomelanotis Nehring 1902 The jungle cat has a uniformly sandy reddish brown or grey fur without spots melanistic and albino individuals are also known It is solitary in nature except during the mating season and mother kitten families Adults maintain territories by urine spraying and scent marking Its preferred prey is small mammals and birds It hunts by stalking its prey followed by a sprint or a leap the ears help in pinpointing the location of prey Both sexes become sexually mature by the time they are one year old females enter oestrus from January to March Mating behaviour is similar to that in the domestic cat the male pursues the female in oestrus seizes her by the nape of her neck and mounts her Gestation lasts nearly two months Births take place between December and June though this might vary geographically Kittens begin to catch their own prey at around six months and leave the mother after eight or nine months The species was first described by Johann Anton Guldenstadt in 1776 based on a specimen caught in a Caucasian wetland 4 Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber gave the jungle cat its present binomial name and is therefore generally considered as binomial authority Three subspecies are recognised at present 5 Contents 1 Taxonomy and phylogeny 1 1 Taxonomic history 1 2 Classification 1 3 Phylogeny 2 Characteristics 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology and behaviour 4 1 Diet and hunting 4 2 Reproduction 5 Threats 6 Conservation 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy and phylogeny editTaxonomic history edit nbsp Illustration of the jungle cat by Joseph Smit 1874 nbsp Illustration by Joseph Smit 1892 The Baltic German naturalist Johann Anton Guldenstadt was the first scientist who caught a jungle cat near the Terek River at the southern frontier of the Russian empire a region that he explored in 1768 1775 on behalf of Catherine II of Russia 6 He described this specimen in 1776 under the name Chaus 4 7 In 1778 Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber used chaus as the species name and is therefore considered the binomial authority 2 8 Paul Matschie in 1912 and Joel Asaph Allen in 1920 challenged the validity of Guldenstadt s nomenclature arguing that the name Felis auriculis apice nigro barbatis was not a binomen and therefore improper and that chaus was used as a common name rather than as part of the scientific name 9 In the 1820s Eduard Ruppell collected a female jungle cat near Lake Manzala in the Nile Delta 10 Thomas Hardwicke s collection of illustrations of Indian wildlife comprises the first drawing of an Indian jungle cat named the allied cat Felis affinis by John Edward Gray in 1830 11 Two years later Johann Friedrich von Brandt proposed a new species under the name Felis ruppelii recognising the distinctness of the Egyptian jungle cat 12 The same year a stuffed cat was presented at a meeting of the Asiatic Society of Bengal that had been caught in the jungles of Midnapore in West Bengal India J T Pearson who donated the specimen proposed the name Felis kutas noting that it differed in colouration from Felis chaus 13 Isidore Geoffroy Saint Hilaire described a jungle cat from the area of Dehra Dun in northern India in 1844 under the name Felis jacquemontii in memory of Victor Jacquemont 14 In 1836 Brian Houghton Hodgson proclaimed the red eared cat commonly found in Nepal to be a lynx and therefore named it Lynchus erythrotus 15 Edward Frederick Kelaart described the first jungle cat skin from Sri Lanka in 1852 and stressed upon its close resemblance to Hodgson s red cat 16 William Thomas Blanford pointed out the lynx like appearance of cat skins and skulls from the plains around Yarkant County and Kashgar when he described Felis shawiana in 1876 17 Nikolai Severtzov proposed the generic name Catolynx in 1858 18 followed by Leopold Fitzinger s suggestion to call it Chaus catolynx in 1869 19 In 1898 William Edward de Winton proposed to subordinate the specimens from the Caucasus Persia and Turkestan to Felis chaus typica and regrouped the lighter built specimens from the Indian subcontinent to F c affinis He renamed the Egyptian jungle cat as F c nilotica because Felis ruppelii was already applied to a different cat A skin collected near Jericho in 1864 led him to describe a new subspecies F c furax as this skin was smaller than other Egyptian jungle cat skins 20 A few years later Alfred Nehring also described a jungle cat skin collected in Palestine which he named Lynx chrysomelanotis 21 Reginald Innes Pocock reviewed the nomenclature of felids in 1917 and classified the jungle cat group as part of the genus Felis 22 Another subspecies Felis chaus fulvidina was named by Oldfield Thomas in 1928 23 During an expedition to Afghanistan in the 1880s mammal skins were collected and later presented to the Indian Museum One cat skin without a skull from the area of Maimanah in the country s north was initially identified as of Felis caudata but in the absence of skins for comparison the author was not sure whether his identification was correct 24 In his revision of Asiatic wildcat skins collected in the Zoological Museum of Berlin the German zoologist Zukowsky reassessed the Maimanah cat skin and because of its larger size and shorter tail than caudata skins proposed a new species with the scientific name Felis Felis maimanah Zukowsky assumed that the cat inhabits the region south of the Amu Darya River 25 The Russian zoologist Ognev acknowledged Zukowsky s assessment but also suggested that more material is needed for a definite taxonomic classification of this cat 26 In his posthumously published monograph about skins and skulls of the genus Felis in the collection of the Natural History Museum the British taxonomist Pocock referred neither to Zukowsky s appraisal nor to jungle cat skins from Afghanistan 27 The British natural historian Ellerman and zoologist Morrison Scott tentatively subordinated the Maimanah cat skin as a subspecies of Felis chaus 28 In 1969 the Russian biologist Heptner described a jungle cat from the lower course of the Vakhsh River in Central Asia and proposed the name Felis Felis chaus oxiana 3 In the 1930s Pocock reviewed the jungle cat skins and skulls from British India and adjacent countries Based mainly on differences in fur length and colour he subordinated the zoological specimens from Turkestan to Balochistan to F c chaus the Himalayan ones to F c affinis the ones from Cutch to Bengal under F c kutas and the tawnier ones from Burma under F c fulvidina He newly described six larger skins from Sind as F c prateri and skins with shorter coats from Sri Lanka and southern India as F c kelaarti 29 Classification edit In 2005 the authors of Mammal Species of the World recognized 10 subspecies as valid taxa 2 Since 2017 the Cat Specialist Group considers only three subspecies as valid Geographical variation of the jungle cat is not yet well understood and needs to be examined 5 The following table is based on the classification of the species provided in Mammal Species of the World It also shows the synonyms used in the revision of the Cat Classification Task Force Subspecies Synonymous with DistributionFelis chaus chaus Schreber 1777 F c furax de Winton 1898 F c nilotica de Winton 1898 F c maimanah Zukowsky 1915 F c oxiana Heptner 1969 Caucasus Turkestan Iran Baluchistan and Yarkand East Turkestan Palestine Israel southern Syria Iraq Egypt 30 northern Afghanistan and south of the Amu Darya River 31 along the right tributaries of the Amu Darya River in the lower courses of the Vakhsh River ranging eastwards to the Gissar Valley and slightly beyond Dushanbe 3 Felis chaus affinis Gray 1830 F c kutas Pearson 1832 F c kelaarti Pocock 1939 F c prateri Pocock 1939 F c valbalala Deraniyagala 1955 South Asia Himalayan region ranging from Kashmir and Nepal to Sikkim Bengal westwards to Kutch and Yunnan southern India and Sri Lanka 30 Felis chaus fulvidina Thomas 1929 Southeast Asia ranging from Myanmar and Thailand to Laos Cambodia and Vietnam 30 Phylogeny edit In 2006 the phylogenetic relationship of the jungle cat was described as follows 32 33 Felinae Acinonyx Cheetah Acinonyx jubatus Puma Cougar P concolor Jaguarundi P yagouaroundi Felis Jungle cat F chaus Black footed cat F nigripes Sand cat F margarita wildcats European wildcat F silvestris silvestris Domestic cat F catus Chinese mountain cat F bieti African wildcat F silvestris lybica Prionailurus Leopard cat P bengalensis Sunda leopard cat P javanensis Flat headed cat P planiceps Fishing cat P viverrinus Rusty spotted cat P rubiginosus Otocolobus Pallas s cat O manul The jungle cat is a member of the genus Felis within the family Felidae 2 Results of an mtDNA analysis of 55 jungle cats from various biogeographic zones in India indicate a high genetic variation and a relatively low differentiation between populations It appears that the central Indian F c kutas population separates the Thar F c prateri populations from the rest and also the south Indian F c kelaarti populations from the north Indian F c affinis ones The central Indian populations are genetically closer to the southern than to the northern populations 34 Characteristics edit nbsp A close view of a jungle cat F c affinis Note the plain coat and the dark tipped hairs The jungle cat is a medium sized long legged cat and the largest of the extant Felis species 35 36 The head and body length is typically between 59 and 76 cm 23 and 30 in It stands nearly 36 cm 14 in at shoulder and weighs 2 16 kg 4 4 35 3 lb 37 38 Its body size decreases from west to east this was attributed to greater competition from small cats in the east 39 Its body size shows a similar decrease from the northern latitudes toward the tropics Sexually dimorphic females tend to be smaller and lighter than males The face is long and narrow with a white muzzle The large pointed ears 4 5 8 cm 1 8 3 1 in in length and reddish brown on the back are set close together a small tuft of black hairs nearly 15 mm 0 59 in long emerges from the tip of both ears The eyes have yellow irides and elliptical pupils white lines can be seen around the eye Dark lines run from the corner of the eyes down the sides of the nose and a dark patch marks the nose 37 38 40 The skull is fairly broad in the region of the zygomatic arch hence the head of this cat appears relatively rounder 3 The coat sandy reddish brown or grey is uniformly coloured and lacks spots melanistic and albino individuals have been reported from the Indian subcontinent White cats observed in the coastline tracts of the southern Western Ghats lacked the red eyes typical of true albinos A 2014 suggested that their colouration could be attributed to inbreeding 41 Kittens are striped and spotted and adults may retain some of the markings Dark tipped hairs cover the body giving the cat a speckled appearance The belly is generally lighter than the rest of the body and the throat is pale The fur is denser on the back compared to the underparts Two moults can be observed in a year the coat is rougher and lighter in summer than in winter The insides of the forelegs show four to five rings faint markings may be seen on the outside The black tipped tail 21 to 36 cm 8 3 to 14 2 in long is marked by two to three dark rings on the last third of the length 38 35 The pawprints measure about 5 cm 6 cm 2 0 in 2 4 in the cat can cover 29 to 32 cm 11 to 13 in in one step 3 There is a distinct spinal crest 40 Because of its long legs short tail and tuft on the ears the jungle cat resembles a small lynx 35 It is larger and more slender than the domestic cat 42 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp A jungle cat in the Sundarbans India nbsp Female at side of road near Thol Bird Sanctuary Gujarat IndiaThe jungle cat is found in the Middle East the Caucasus the Indian subcontinent central and Southeast Asia Sri Lanka and in southern China 1 43 40 A habitat generalist the jungle cat inhabits places with adequate water and dense vegetation such as swamps wetlands littoral and riparian areas grasslands and shrub It is common in agricultural lands such as fields of bean and sugarcane across its range and has often been sighted near human settlements As reeds and tall grasses are typical of its habitat it is known as reed cat or swamp cat 44 42 It can thrive even in areas of sparse vegetation but does not adapt well to cold climates and is rare in areas where snowfall is common 35 Historical records indicate that it occurs up to elevations of 2 310 m 7 580 ft in the Himalayas 29 It shuns rainforests and woodlands 35 36 42 In Turkey it has been recorded in wetlands near Manavgat in the Akyatan Lagoon on the southern coast and near Lake Egirdir 45 46 In the Palestinian territories it was recorded in the Nablus Ramallah Jericho and Jerusalem Governorates in the West Bank during surveys carried out between 2012 and 2016 47 In Iran it inhabits a variety of habitat types from plains and agriculture lands to mountains ranging from elevations of 45 to 4 178 m 148 to 13 707 ft in at least 23 of 31 provinces of Iran 48 In Pakistan it was photographed in Haripur Dera Ismail Khan Sialkot Districts and Langh Lake Wildlife Sanctuary 49 In India it is the most common small wild cat 39 In Nepal it was recorded in alpine habitat at elevations of 3 000 3 300 m 9 800 10 800 ft in Annapurna Conservation Area between 2014 and 2016 50 In Malaysia it was recorded in a highly fragmented forest in the Selangor state in 2010 51 A few jungle cat mummies were found among the cats in ancient Egypt 52 53 54 Ecology and behaviour edit nbsp The jungle cat rests during the hot midday hours The jungle cat is typically diurnal and hunts throughout the day Its activity tends to decrease during the hot noon hours It rests in burrows grass thickets and scrubs It often sunbathes on winter days Jungle cats have been estimated to walk 3 6 km 1 9 3 7 mi at night although this likely varies depending on the availability of prey The behaviour of the jungle cat has not been extensively studied Solitary in nature it does not associate with conspecifics except in the mating season The only prominent interaction is the mother kitten bond Territories are maintained by urine spraying and scent marking some males have been observed rubbing their cheeks on objects to mark them 38 35 Leopards tigers bears crocodiles dholes golden jackals fishing cats large raptors and snakes are the main predators of the jungle cat 3 38 The golden jackal in particular can be a major competitor to jungle cats 55 When it encounters a threat the jungle cat will vocalise before engaging in attack producing sounds like small roars a behavior uncommon for the other members of Felis The meow of the jungle cat is also somewhat lower than that of a typical domestic cat 3 38 The jungle cat can host parasites such as Haemaphysalis ticks and Heterophyes trematode species 56 Diet and hunting edit nbsp The posture in which the jungle cat stalks its preyPrimarily a carnivore the jungle cat prefers small mammals such as gerbils hares and rodents It also hunts birds fishes frogs insects and small snakes Its prey typically weighs less than 1 kg 2 2 lb but occasionally includes mammals as large as young gazelles 38 35 The jungle cat is unusual in that it is partially omnivorous it eats fruits especially in winter In a study carried out in Sariska Tiger Reserve rodents were found to comprise as much as 95 of its diet 57 The jungle cat hunts by stalking its prey followed by a sprint or a leap the sharp ears help in pinpointing the location of prey It uses different techniques to secure prey The cat has been observed searching for musk rats in their holes Like the caracal the jungle cat can perform one or two high leaps into the air to grab birds 35 It is an efficient climber as well 3 The jungle cat has been clocked at 32 km h 20 mph 36 35 It is an efficient swimmer and can swim up to 1 5 km 0 93 mi in water and plunge into water to catch fish 58 Reproduction edit Both sexes become sexually mature by the time they are one year old Females enter oestrus lasting for about five days from January to March In males spermatogenesis occurs mainly in February and March In southern Turkmenistan mating occurs from January to early February The mating season is marked by noisy fights among males for dominance Mating behaviour is similar to that in the domestic cat the male pursues the female in oestrus seizes her by the nape of her neck and mounts her Vocalisations and flehmen are prominent during courtship After a successful copulation the female gives out a loud cry and reacts with aversion towards her partner The pair then separate 3 38 Gestation lasts nearly two months Births take place between December and June though this might vary geographically Before parturition the mother prepares a den of grass in an abandoned animal burrow hollow tree or reed bed 35 Litters comprise one to five kittens typically two to three kittens Females can raise two litters in a year 3 38 Kittens weigh between 43 and 55 g 1 5 and 1 9 oz at birth tending to be much smaller in the wild than in captivity Initially blind and helpless they open their eyes at 10 to 13 days of age and are fully weaned by around three months Males usually do not participate in the raising of kittens however in captivity males appear to be very protective of their offspring Kittens begin to catch their own prey at around six months and leave the mother after eight or nine months 3 59 The lifespan of the jungle cat in captivity is 15 to 20 years this is possibly higher than that in the wild 38 Generation length of the jungle cat is 5 2 years 60 Threats edit nbsp A jungle cat in the Olmense Zoo BelgiumMajor threats to the jungle cat include habitat loss such as the destruction of wetlands dam construction environmental pollution industrialisation and urbanisation Illegal hunting is a threat in Turkey and Iran Its rarity in Southeast Asia is possibly due to high levels of hunting 1 Since the 1960s populations of the Caucasian jungle cat living along the Caspian Sea and in the Caucasus range states have been rapidly declining Only small populations persist today There has been no record in the Astrakhan Nature Reserve in the Volga Delta since the 1980s 61 It is rare in the Middle East In Jordan it is highly affected by the expansion of agricultural areas around the river beds of Yarmouk and Jordan rivers where farmers hunted and poisoned jungle cats in retaliation for attacking poultry 62 It is also considered rare and threatened in Afghanistan 63 India exported jungle cat skins in large numbers until this trade was banned in 1979 some illegal trade continues in the country in Egypt and Afghanistan 1 In the 1970s Southeast Asian jungle cats still used to be the most common wild cats near villages in certain parts of northern Thailand and occurred in many protected areas of the country 64 However since the early 1990s jungle cats are rarely encountered and have suffered drastic declines due to hunting and habitat destruction Today their official status in the country is critically endangered 65 In Cambodia Laos and Vietnam jungle cats have been subject to extensive hunting Skins are occasionally recorded in border markets and live individuals possibly taken from Myanmar or Cambodia occasionally turn up in the Khao Khieo and Chiang Mai zoos of Thailand 66 Conservation editThe jungle cat is listed under CITES Appendix II Hunting is prohibited in Bangladesh China India Israel Myanmar Pakistan Tajikistan Thailand and Turkey But it does not receive legal protection outside protected areas in Bhutan Georgia Laos Lebanon Nepal Sri Lanka and Vietnam 44 References edit a b c d e f g Gray T N E Timmins R J Jathana D Duckworth J W Baral H amp Mukherjee S 2016 amended version of 2016 assessment Felis chaus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T8540A200639312 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 2 RLTS T8540A200639312 en Retrieved 24 January 2022 a b c d Wozencraft W C 2005 Order Carnivora In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 535 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d e f g h i j k Geptner V G Sludskij A A 1992 1972 Jungle Cat Mlekopitajuscie Sovetskogo Soiuza Moskva Vyssaia Skola Mammals of the Soviet Union Volume II Part 2 Carnivora Hyaenas and Cats Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and the National Science Foundation pp 356 398 a b Guldenstadt J A 1776 Chaus Animal feli adfine descriptum Novi Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae in Latin 20 483 500 a b Kitchener A C Breitenmoser Wursten C Eizirik E Gentry A Werdelin L Wilting A Yamaguchi N Abramov A V Christiansen P Driscoll C Duckworth J W Johnson W Luo S J Meijaard E O Donoghue P Sanderson J Seymour K Bruford M Groves C Hoffmann M Nowell K Timmons Z amp Tobe S 2017 A revised taxonomy of the Felidae The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group PDF Cat News Special Issue 11 11 13 Guldenstadt J A 1787 Reisen durch Russland und im Caucasischen Geburge in German St Petersburg Russia Kayserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften Sanderson J 2009 A Matter of Very Little Moment The mystery of who first described the jungle cat Feline Conservation Federation 53 1 12 18 Schreber J C D 1778 Der Kirmyschak Die Saugethiere in Abbildungen nach der Natur mit Beschreibungen Erlangen Wolfgang Walther pp 414 416 Allen J A 1920 Note on Guldenstadt s names of certain species of Felidae Journal of Mammalogy 1 2 90 91 doi 10 1093 jmammal 1 2 90 Ruppell E 1826 Felis chaus der Kirmyschak Atlas zu der Reise im nordlichen Afrika in German pp 13 14 Gray J E 1830 Illustrations of Indian Zoology chiefly selected from the collection of Major General Hardwicke Vol 1 London UK Treuttel Wurtz Treuttel jun and Richter Brandt J F 1832 De nova generis Felis specie Felis Ruppelii nomine designanda hucusque vero cum Fele Chau confusa Bulletin de la Societe Imperiale des Naturalistes de Moscou in Latin 4 209 213 Pearson J T 1832 A stuffed specimen of a species of Felis native of the Midnapure jungles Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 1 75 Saint Hilaire I G 1844 Voyage dans l Inde par Victor Jacquemont pendant les annees 1828 a 1832 Travel in India Victor Jacquemont during the years 1828 to 1832 in French Paris France Firmin Didot Freres Hodgson B H 1836 Synoptical description of sundry new animals enumerated in the Catalogue of Nepalese Mammals Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 5 231 238 Kelaart E F 1852 Felis chaus Prodromus Faunae Zeylanicae 48 Blanford W T 1876 Description of Felis shawiana a new Lyncine cat from eastern Turkestan The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 45 2 49 51 Severtzov N 1858 Notice sur la classification multiseriale des Carnivores specialement des Felides et les etudes de zoologie generale qui s y rattachent Revue et Magasin de Zoologie Pure et Appliquee in French 2 385 396 Fitzinger L 1869 Revision der zur naturlichen Familie der Katzen Feles gehorigen Formen Sitzungsberichte der Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Classe der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften in German 60 1 173 262 de Winton W E 1898 Felis chaus and its allies with descriptions of new subspecies The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Including Zoology Botany and Geology 2 2 10 291 294 doi 10 1080 00222939808678046 Nehring A 1902 Uber einen neuen Sumpfluchs Lynx chrysomelanotis aus Palastina Schriften der Berlinischen Gesellschaft Naturforschender Freunde in German Jahrgang 6 124 128 Pocock R I 1917 Classification of existing Felidae The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Including Zoology Botany and Geology 8th 20 119 329 350 doi 10 1080 00222931709487018 Thomas O 1928 The Delacour Exploration of French Indo China Mammals III Mammals collected during the Winter of 1927 28 Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 98 4 831 841 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1928 tb07170 x Scully J 1887 On the mammals collected by Captain C E Yate C S I of the Afghan Boundary Commission The Annals and Magazine of Natural History Including Zoology Botany and Geology Fifth Series Vol XX 378 388 Zukowsky L 1914 Drei neue Kleinkatzenrassen aus Westasien Felis Felis maimanah spec nov Archiv fur Naturgeschichte 80 10 139 142 Ognev S I 1935 Zveri SSSR i prilezascich stran Tom III Gosudarstvennoe izdatel stvo biologiceskoj i medicinskoj literatury Moskva i Leningrad Page 144 in Russian Mammals of USSR and adjacent countries Volume III Pocock R I 1951 Catalogue of the Genus Felis The Trustees of the British Museum London Ellerman J R Morrison Scott T C S 1966 Felis chaus Guldenstadt 1776 Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals 1758 to 1946 Second ed London British Museum of Natural History pp 306 307 a b Pocock R I 1939 The Fauna of British India including Ceylon and Burma Mammalia Vol 1 London Taylor and Francis pp 290 305 a b c Ellerman J R Morrison Scott T C S 1966 Felis chaus Guldenstadt 1776 Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian Mammals 1758 to 1946 2nd ed London British Museum of Natural History pp 306 307 Zukowsky L 1914 Drei neue Kleinkatzenrassen aus Westasien Three new small breeds from east Asia Archiv fur Naturgeschichte in German 80 10 139 142 Johnson W E Eizirik E Pecon Slattery J Murphy W J Antunes A Teeling E amp O Brien S J 2006 The Late Miocene radiation of modern Felidae A genetic assessment Science 311 5757 73 77 Bibcode 2006Sci 311 73J doi 10 1126 science 1122277 PMID 16400146 S2CID 41672825 Werdelin L Yamaguchi N Johnson W E amp O Brien S J 2010 Phylogeny and evolution of cats Felidae In Macdonald D W amp Loveridge A J eds Biology and Conservation of Wild Felids Reprint ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 59 82 ISBN 978 0 19 923445 5 Mukherjee S Krishnan A Tamma K Home C R N Joseph S Das A Ramakrishnan U Murphy W J 2010 Ecology driving genetic variation A comparative phylogeography of jungle cat Felis chaus and leopard cat Prionailurus bengalensis in India PLOS ONE 5 10 e13724 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 513724M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0013724 PMC 2966403 PMID 21060831 a b c d e f g h i j Sunquist M amp Sunquist F 2002 Jungle cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 Wild Cats of the World Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 60 66 ISBN 978 0 226 77999 7 a b c Hunter L 2015 Jungle Cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 Wild Cats of the World London UK Bloomsbury Publishing pp 38 41 ISBN 978 1 4729 2285 4 a b Burnie D Wilson D E eds 2001 Animal First American ed New York Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7894 7764 4 a b c d e f g h i j Kingdon J Happold D Butynski T Hoffmann M Happold M amp Kalina J 2013 Mammals of Africa London UK Bloomsbury Publishing pp 197 199 ISBN 978 1 4081 8996 2 a b Mukherjee S amp Groves C 2007 Geographic variation in jungle cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 Mammalia Carnivora Felidae body size is competition responsible Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 92 1 163 172 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2007 00838 x a b c Wozencraft W C 2010 Jungle cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 In Smith A T Xie Y eds A Guide to the Mammals of China Princeton Princeton University Press p 394 ISBN 978 1 4008 3411 2 Sanil R Shameer T T Easa P S 2014 Albinism in jungle cat and jackal along the coastline of the southern Western Ghats Cat News 61 23 25 a b c Sunquist F Sunquist M 2014 The Wild Cat Book Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Cats Chicago USA University of Chicago Press pp 239 241 ISBN 978 0 226 78026 9 Blanford W T 1891 Felis chaus The Fauna of British India including Ceylon and Burma London Taylor amp Francis pp 86 88 a b Nowell K Jackson P 1996 Jungle cat Felis chaus Wild Cats Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan IUCN Species Survival Commission Cat Specialist Group Archived from the original on 24 December 2005 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Avgan B 2009 Sighting of a jungle cat and the threats of its habitat in Turkey Cat News 50 16 Ogurlu I Gundogdu E amp Yildirim I C 2010 Population status of jungle cat Felis chaus in Egirdir lake Turkey Journal of Environmental Biology 31 31 179 183 PMID 20648830 Albaba I 2016 The terrestrial mammals of Palestine A preliminary checklist International Journal of Fauna and Biological Studies 3 4 28 35 Sanei A Mousavi M Rabiee K Khosravi M S Julaee L Gudarzi F Jaafari B amp Chalani M 2016 Distribution characteristics and conservation of the jungle cat in Iran Cat News Special Issue 10 51 55 Anjum A Appel A amp Kabir M 2020 First photographic record of Jungle Cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 Mammalia Carnivora Felidae in Haripur District Pakistan Journal of Threatened Taxa 12 2 15251 15255 doi 10 11609 jott 5386 12 2 15251 15255 Shrestha B Subedi N amp Kandel R C 2020 Jungle Cat Felis chaus Schreber 1777 Mammalia Carnivora Felidae at high elevations in Annapurna Conservation Area Nepal Journal of Threatened Taxa 12 2 15267 15271 doi 10 11609 jott 5580 12 2 15267 15271 Sanei A amp Zakaria M 2010 Possible first jungle cat record from Malaysia Cat News 53 13 14 Morrison Scott T C S 1952 The mummified cats of ancient Egypt PDF Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 121 4 861 867 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1952 tb00788 x Linseele V Van Neer W amp Hendrickx S 2008 Early cat taming in Egypt Journal of Archaeological Science 35 9 2672 2673 doi 10 1016 j jas 2008 04 009 Hanzak J 1977 Egyptian Mummies of Animals in Czechoslovak Collections Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde 104 1 86 88 doi 10 1524 zaes 1977 104 jg 86 S2CID 192916062 Majumder A Sankar K Qureshi Q Basu S 2011 Food habits and temporal activity patterns of the golden jackal Canis aureus and the jungle cat Felis chaus in Pench Tiger Reserve Madhya Pradesh Journal of Threatened Taxa 3 11 2221 2225 doi 10 11609 JoTT o2713 2221 5 Hoogstraal H Trapido H 1963 Haemaphysalis silvafelis sp n a parasite of the jungle cat in southern India Ixodoidea Ixodidae The Journal of Parasitology 49 2 346 349 doi 10 2307 3276012 JSTOR 3276012 Mukherjee S Goyal S P Johnsingh A J T Pitman M R P L 2004 The importance of rodents in the diet of jungle cat Felis chaus caracal Caracal caracal and golden jackal Canis aureus in Sariska Tiger Reserve Rajasthan India Journal of Zoology 262 4 405 411 doi 10 1017 S0952836903004783 Hinde G Hunter L 2005 Cats of Africa Behaviour Ecology and Conservation Cape Town South Africa Struik Publishers p 76 ISBN 978 1 77007 063 9 Schauenberg P 1979 La reproduction du Chat des marais Felis chaus Guldenstadt 1776 Reproduction of swamp cat Felis chaus Guldenstadt 1776 Mammalia in French 43 2 215 223 doi 10 1515 mamm 1979 43 2 215 S2CID 86844646 Pacifici M Santini L Di Marco M Baisero D Francucci L Grottolo Marasini G Visconti P amp Rondinini C 2013 Generation length for mammals Nature Conservation 5 87 94 Prisazhnyuk B E Belousova A E 2007 Krasnaya Kniga Rossii Kavkaeskij Kamyshovyj KotFelis chaus podvid chaus in Russian Retrieved 21 April 2016 Abu Baker M Nassar K Rifai L Qarqaz M Al Melhim W Amr Z 2003 On the current status and distribution of the Jungle Cat Felis chaus in Jordan Mammalia Carnivora PDF Zoology in the Middle East 30 5 10 doi 10 1080 09397140 2003 10637982 S2CID 85402488 Habibi K 2003 Jungle Cat Felis chaus Mammals of Afghanistan Coimbatore India Zoo Outreach Organisation ISBN 9788188722068 Lekagul B McNeely J A 1988 Mammals of Thailand 2nd ed Saha Karn Bhaet Bangkok Lynam A J Round P Brockelman W Y 2006 Status of birds and large mammals of the Dong Phayayen Khao Yai Forest Complex Thailand Biodiversity Research and Training Program and Wildlife Conservation Society Bangkok Thailand Duckworth J W Poole C M Tizard R J Walston J L Timmins R J 2005 The Jungle Cat Felis chaus in Indochina a threatened population of a widespread and adaptable species Biodiversity amp Conservation 14 5 1263 1280 doi 10 1007 s10531 004 1653 4 S2CID 43124074 External links edit nbsp Media related to Felis chaus at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jungle cat amp oldid 1191463964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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