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Sand cat

The sand cat (Felis margarita) is a small wild cat that inhabits sandy and stony deserts far from water sources. With its sandy to light grey fur, it is well camouflaged in a desert environment. Its head-and-body length ranges from 39–52 cm (15–20 in) with a 23–31 cm (9.1–12.2 in) long tail. Its 5–7 cm (2.0–2.8 in) short ears are set low on the sides of the head, aiding detection of prey moving underground. The long hair covering the soles of its paws insulates its pads against the extreme temperatures found in deserts.

Sand 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. margarita
Binomial name
Felis margarita
Loche, 1858
Subspecies
  • F. m. margarita Loche, 1858
  • F. m. thinobia (Ognev, 1927)
Distribution of the sand cat in 2016[1]
Synonyms[2]
synonyms of F. margarita
  • Felis marginata Gray, 1867
  • F. margaritae Trouessart, 1897
  • F. marguerittei Trouessart, 1905
  • Otocolobus margarita Heptner and Dementiev, 1937
synonyms of F. m. margarita
  • F. m. meinertzhageni Pocock, 1938
  • F. m. aïrensis Pocock, 1938
synonyms of F. m. thinobius
  • Eremaelurus thinobius Ognev, 1926
  • Felis thinobius Pocock, 1938
  • F. m. scheffeli Hemmer, 1974
  • F. m. harrisoni Hemmer, Grubb, and Groves, 1976

The first sand cat known to scientists was discovered in the Algerian Sahara and described in 1858. To date, it has been recorded in several disjunct locations in Western Sahara, Morocco, Algeria, Niger, Chad, Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East. In Central Asia, it was first recorded in the Karakum Desert in 1925. The large gap between these two regions of its global range was partially closed in 1948, when a sand cat skin was found in an oasis of the Rub' al Khali in Oman. It is discontinuously distributed in the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East. In the early 1970s, sand cats were caught in southwestern Pakistan and exported to zoos worldwide. Due to its wide distribution and large population, it is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List.

The sand cat usually rests in underground dens during the day and hunts at night. It moves 5.4 km (3.4 mi) on average at night in search of small rodents and birds. It also kills and consumes venomous snakes. In spring, the female gives birth to two to three kittens, which become sexually mature around the age of one year. The sand cat's ecological requirements are still poorly understood, as only a few in-depth studies targeting wild sand cat populations have been conducted.

Taxonomy edit

 
Sand cat at Ree Park zoo, Denmark

Felis margarita was the scientific name proposed by Victor Loche in 1858 who first described a sand cat specimen found in the area of "Négonça" in the northern Algerian Sahara.[3] This holotype specimen appears to have been lost.[4][5] The species was named after the French General Jean Auguste Margueritte.[6]

In the 20th century, the following zoological specimens of sand cats were described:

  • Eremaelurus thinobius was proposed as a species by Sergey Ognev in 1926. The specimen had been collected in the eastern Karakum Desert in Turkmenistan.[7] In 1938, Reginald Innes Pocock also considered it a species, but subordinated it to the genus Felis using the scientific name Felis thinobius.[8] Later he considered it a sand cat subspecies,[9] which to date is widely recognised.[4][10][5][11][6]
  • F. m. meinertzhageni proposed by Pocock in 1938 was a sand cat skin from the Algerian Sahara.[8]
  • F. m. aïrensis proposed by Pocock in 1938 was a female specimen collected in the Aïr Mountains in 1937.[12]
  • F. m. scheffeli proposed by German zoologist Helmut Hemmer in 1974 was described on the basis of seven sand cats that had been captured alive in Pakistan's Nushki desert.[13]
  • F. m. harrisoni proposed by Hemmer, Grubb and Groves in 1976 was described on the basis of a skin and skull of an adult male sand cat captured in 1967 in Umm al Samim, Oman.[14]

In 1974, F. m. margarita, F. m. thinobia and F. m. scheffeli were temporarily recognized as valid taxa. At the time, it was considered possible that sand cats eventually recorded in Afghanistan and Iran might constitute distinct subspecies.[5] In 2005, F. m. margarita, F. m. thinobia, F. m. scheffeli and F. m. harrisoni were recognised as valid taxa by W. Chris Wozencraft, who considered F. m. meinertzhageni and F. m. aïrensis synonyms of the nominate subspecies F. m. margarita.[2] The Cat Classification Task Force of the Cat Specialist Group reviewed the existing information and in 2017 recognized only two subspecies based on morphological differences, namely:[15]

 
An Arabian sand cat at Osnabrück Zoo, Germany
  • Felis margarita margarita, also called the Saharan sand cat, occurs in North Africa. It is smaller in size with brighter, more yellow fur, with more pronounced markings and 2–6 rings on the tail.[15]
  • Felis margarita thinobia, also called the Turkestan sand cat, Arabian sand cat, and Pakistan sand cat, it occurs in West and Central Asia. It is larger in size with less pronounced markings, a darker, more greyish coat, and only 2–3 rings on the tail.[15][16]

Analysis of mitochondrial DNA of 47 individuals from across the sand cat's range showed that their haplotypes differed only by one to three base pair mutations. This low degree of genetic differentiation between the African and Asian sand cats indicates that the Sinai Peninsula may have been a barrier to gene flow.[16]

Phylogeny edit

Phylogenetic analysis of the nuclear DNA in tissue samples from all Felidae species revealed that the evolutionary radiation of the Felidae began in Asia in the Miocene around 14.45 to 8.38 million years ago.[17][18] Analysis of mitochondrial DNA of all Felidae species indicates a radiation at around 16.76 to 6.46 million years ago.[19] The sand cat is part of an evolutionary lineage that is estimated to have genetically diverged from the common ancestor of the Felis species around 4.44 to 2.16 million years ago, based on analysis of their nuclear DNA.[17][18] Analysis of their mitochondrial DNA indicates a genetic divergence of the Felis species at around 6.52 to 1.03 million years ago.[19] Both models agree that the jungle cat (F. chaus) was the first Felis species that diverged, followed by the black-footed cat (F. nigripes) and then the sand cat.[17][19] It migrated into Africa, possibly during Pleistocene glaciation events.[17] Migration was likely facilitated by extended periods of low sea levels between continents.[19]

A fossil jaw and other skeletal remains of a sand cat were excavated in a Late Pleistocene cave in El Harhoura located near Temara in Morocco.[20]

Characteristics edit

 
Sand cat in Cincinnati Zoo
 
Illustration of a sand cat skull[21]

The sand cat's fur is of a pale, sandy, isabelline colour, but much lighter on the lower part of the head, around the nose, throat, and on the belly. A faint reddish line runs from the outer corner of each eye across the cheeks.[3] There are dark brown to blackish bars on the limbs, and the tail has a black tip with two or three dark rings alternating with buff bands. Markings vary between individuals: some have neither spots nor stripes, some are faintly spotted, some have both spots and stripes.[5] Its head is sandy brown. The large, greenish-yellow eyes are ringed with white, and the nose is blackish.[22] Its whiskers are white and up to 8 cm (3.1 in) long.[6] Its ears are tawny at the base and tipped with black.[11] Its outer ear is similar to that of a domestic cat, but its ear canal is about twice the size. The magnitude of acoustic input-admittance is about five times higher than of a domestic cat. Additionally, hearing sensitivity of the sand cat is about 8 decibels greater than that of the domestic cat.[23]

In Central Asia, the sand cat's winter coat is very long and thick, with hairs reaching up to 51 mm (2 in) in length. Its claws on the forelimbs are short and very sharp, and claws on the hind feet are small and blunt.[24] The undersides of its paws are protected from extreme temperatures by a thick covering of fur.[5] The long hairs growing between its toes create a cushion of fur over the foot pads, helping to insulate them while moving over hot sand. This feature makes the cat's tracks obscure and difficult to identify and follow.[25]

The sand cat is characterized by a flat, wide head, short legs, and a relatively long tail of 23–31 cm (9.1–12.2 in). It stands 24–36 cm (9.4–14.2 in) at the shoulder and weighs 1.5–3.4 kg (3.3–7.5 lb). The head-and-body length ranges from 39–52 cm (15–20 in). The 5–7 cm (2.0–2.8 in) long ears are set low, giving a broad, flat appearance to the head.[11]

Its skull is arched in lateral outline with wide zygomatic arches. The pinnae of the ears are triangular, and the ear canal is very wide, giving the cat an enhanced sense of hearing. The auditory bullae and the passages from the external ears to the ear drums are greatly enlarged compared to other small wild cats; the inner parts of the ears are protected from foreign objects by long, closely spaced white hairs.[21] It has a bite force at the canine tip of 155.4 Newton and a bite force quotient at the canine tip of 136.7.[26]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Captive sand cat

The sand cat inhabits both sandy and stony deserts. It is widely but not contiguously distributed in the deserts of North Africa and Southwest and Central Asia.[14] It prefers flat or undulating terrain with sparse vegetation of grasses or small bushes; it avoids bare and shifting sand dunes, where little prey is available.[27]

In the Western Sahara, sand cats were sighted and photographed in the Dakhla-Oued Ed-Dahab region several times between 2005 and 2016.[28][29][30][31] Sand cat kittens that had been hiding beneath a tuft of Panicum turgidum grass were sighted and photographed in the area in April 2017.[32] In Algeria, one individual was recorded near a salt cedar mound in the Ahaggar Mountains in 2008.[33] No confirmed records are known in Mauritania, Tunisia and Libya. In Mali's Lake Faguibine area, one individual was shortly sighted by night in 2011.[1] In the Ténéré Desert, sand cats were observed in the 1980s and between 2008 and 2015.[27][34] Sightings in Egypt's rocky Western and Eastern Deserts date to the mid 1980s.[35] In the Sinai peninsula, sand cats were sighted in the mid 1990s.[36]

On the Arabian Peninsula, a sand cat skin was discovered by Wilfred Thesiger in 1948 in an oasis of the Rub' al Khali desert.[37] In Saudi Arabia's Mahazat as-Sayd Protected Area, sand cats were captured and encountered trapped in wire mesh fence surrounding the adjacent Saja Umm Ar-Rimth Natural Reserve in the country's Najd region.[38][39][40] In the Tabuk Region, two sand cats were killed by hunters in 2013 and 2016; and one individual was captured by a local farmer in 2014 and kept in a cage.[41] Sand cats were also observed in 2014–2015 in three localities in the Turaif area in northern Saudi Arabia.[42] In 'Uruq Bani Ma'arid on the western edge of the Rub' al Khali, sand cats use gravel valley and sand dune habitats in the cool season from October to April; in the hot season from May to September, they mainly use sand dune habitat.[43] In Al Ain Region of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, a sand cat was sighted in a gravel plain between dunes in 2003.[44] Several sand cats were recorded in a protected area in Al Dhafra, Abu Dhabi between April and December 2015, after an absence of sightings for ten years.[45] In Oman's Dhofar Governorate, it was recorded at several locations between 2021 and 2022.[46]

In southern Israel, four sand cats were radio-collared and tracked over a few months in the late 1980s in the Arabah Valley, which lies mostly in Jordan. The monitored sand cats frequently roamed in military camps of the Israeli army and crossed the international border.[25] Since 2002, the sand cat is considered locally extinct in Israel, as it has not been recorded since the turn of the century.[47] In Jordan, a sand cat was sighted for the first time in 1997 during a survey in a desert area in the eastern part of the country.[48] In Syria, sand cats were sighted and photographed by a camera-trap in a protected area near Palmyra in 2000 and 2001.[49] In western Iraq, sand cats inhabit desert areas in the Najaf, Muthanna and Al Anbar Governorates.[50][51] In Iran, it occurs in arid flat plains and sandy desert of Abbas'abad Wildlife Reserve, Kavir National Park and Petergan Rural District.[52] Between March 2014 and July 2016, sand cats were also observed at elevations of 900–1,100 m (3,000–3,600 ft) in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, foremost in black saxaul dominated habitat.[53] In central Iran, sand cats were observed foremost in sand dunes and sabulous areas during surveys in 2014–2016.[54]

In Pakistan, the first sand cat was detected in 1966 near the Lora River in Balochistan. In the late 1960s, sand cats were also encountered in the Chagai Hills, an extremely arid area comprising rolling sand dunes and stony plains at an elevation of about 1,200 m (3,900 ft).[55]

In Central Asia, the sand cat was known to occur up to the late 1960s in the Karakum Desert from the Ustyurt Plateau in the northwest to the Kopet Dag Mountains in the south, and from the Kyzylkum Desert to the Syr Darya River and the northern border to Afghanistan.[24] Adult sand cats with kittens were photographed in the southern Kyzylkum Desert in spring 2013 and 2014.[56]

Behaviour and ecology edit

The sand cat is solitary, except during the mating season and when a female has kittens.[22] It makes loud, high-pitched and short rasping sounds, especially when seeking a mate. Its vocalizations are similar to those of the domestic cat.[13] It communicates by urine spraying and using scent and scratch marks.[57] It buries its feces and covers it with sand.[27]

Its way of moving is distinct: with its belly close to the ground, it moves at a fast run punctuated with occasional leaps. It is capable of sudden bursts of speed and can sprint at speeds of 30–40 km (19–25 mi) per hour.[27] Four radio-collared sand cats in Israel moved long distances of 5–10 km (3.1–6.2 mi) in a single night. They were generally active throughout the night, hunting and travelling an average distance of 5.4 km (3.4 mi). They retired below ground at dawn and stayed in the burrow during the day. During the survey period, they used several burrows in their home ranges.[25]

Burrows are about 1.5 m (4 ft 11 in) deep and dug in slightly slanting ground with usually only a single entrance, though burrows with two or three entrances have also been observed. These burrows were either abandoned by foxes or porcupines, or dug by gerbils or other rodents. In winter, sand cats stay in the sun during the day, but during the hot season, they are crepuscular and nocturnal.[5]

A male sand cat in Israel had a home range of 16 km2 (6.2 sq mi).[58] In Morocco, a male sand cat travelled 14.1 km (8.8 mi) in 30 hours. A female sand cat moved in an area of 13.4 km2 (5.2 sq mi) during six days, and two males had home ranges of 21.8 and 35.3 km2 (8.4 and 13.6 sq mi).[31] In 2018, several sand cats were observed resting in brown-necked raven nests built in umbrella thorn acacia trees in the Moroccan Sahara.[59]

Hunting and diet edit

In the Ténéré, a desert region in south central Sahara, sand cats were observed preying foremost on small rodents, and the young of cape hare (Lepus capensis), but also hunting greater hoopoe lark (Alaemon alaudipes), desert monitor (Varanus griseus), sandfish (Scincus scincus) and venomous Cerastes vipers. If they caught more than they could eat, they buried the remains for later consumption. They satisfied their moisture requirements from their prey but drank water if it was available. The Toubou people have reported incidents of sand cats coming to their camps at night and drinking fresh camel milk.[27]

In Israel, remains of Egyptian spiny-tailed lizards (Uromastyx aegyptia) were found near burrows used by sand cats.[60] They were observed preying on jirds (Meriones), Cairo spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus), desert lark (Ammomanes deserti) and small reptiles.[25] In central Iran, remains of Blanford's jerboa (Jaculus blanfordi) and Balochistan gerbil (Gerbillus nanus) were the most frequent prey species found around dens of sand cats.[61]

Sand cats were collected in eastern Karakum Desert in the late 1950s. Their feces and stomachs contained remains of tolai hare (Lepus tolai), small rodents, birds, small reptiles and invertebrates.[24] In March 2018, a sand cat was recorded feeding on a MacQueen's bustard (Chlamydotis macqueenii) in the Kyzylkum Desert.[62]

Reproduction and life cycle edit

 
A captive sand cat kitten

Oestrus in female sand cats lasts from five to six days, during which they frequently call and scent mark. After a gestation of 59 to 66 days, they give birth to a litter of two to three kittens. The kittens weigh 39 to 80 g (1.4 to 2.8 oz) at birth, and have spotted pale yellow or reddish fur. They grow relatively rapidly, reaching three quarters of the adult size within five months, are fully independent by the end of their first year and reach sexual maturity soon after the first year.[57] In some areas, sand cats give birth to two litters per year.[27]

Of 228 sand cats born in zoos globally by 2007, only 61% of the kittens lived to day 30. They died primarily due to maternal neglect by first-time mothers. Otherwise, they can live up to 13 years in captivity.[63] The life expectancy of wild sand cats has not been documented.[64][22]

The generation length of the sand cat is about 4 years and 9 months.[65]

Threats edit

Habitat degradation and loss of sand dunes due to human activities are considered major threats to sand cat populations in Western Asia, where uncontrolled hunting and persecution of predators using poisoned baits are common practices.[49][66][67] The sand cat's small-mammal prey-base depends on having adequate vegetation, which may experience large fluctuations due to drought or declines due to desertification and loss of natural vegetation.[1] Fencing of protected areas threatens the sand cat in Saudi Arabia, where several individuals were found stuck in fences.[40] In Iran, vulnerable arid ecosystems are being rapidly degraded by human settlement and activity, especially livestock grazing.[52] In Uzbekistan, drifting sand areas are increasing, as local people uproot shrubs for use as firewood and as a substrate for silk worm (Bombyx mori) cocoons.[56][62]

In the Sahara, sand cats have been killed in traps laid out by inhabitants of oases targeting foxes and golden jackals (Canis aureus) or in retaliation for killing poultry.[27] Several cases of sand cats having been killed by domestic dogs (C. familiaris) were reported in Israel and Iran.[60][52] In Israel, the sand cat was thought to be threatened by predation from caracals (Caracal caracal) and wolves (Canis lupus).[60]

Sand cats have also been caught for the pet trade in the United Arab Emirates and in Iraq.[44][66][50][51] In Baghdad, two sand cats were presented to a local nursery in 2012 that had been sold as pets; they died a week later.[50] In 2014 and 2015, four sand cats were trapped alive by local truffle collectors and offered for sale in a wildlife market in Baghdad; their fate is unknown.[51]

Sand cats may be at risk of transfer of diseases from domestic and feral cats encroaching on desert areas. In Saudi Arabia, one of 17 wild-caught sand cats was tested positive for feline leukaemia virus.[38]

Conservation edit

Felis margarita is listed on CITES Appendix II. Hunting is prohibited in Algeria, Iran, Israel, Kazakhstan, Mauritania, Niger, Pakistan, and Tunisia. No legal protection exists in Egypt, Mali, Morocco, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.[64] Previously having been classified as near threatened, it has been downlisted to least concern in 2016, as the estimated size of the global population exceeds the threshold for a threatened category; the extent of decline of the global population is unknown.[1]

The Jerusalem Biblical Zoo started a sand cat reintroduction project in Israel's Arabah Desert. Several captive-born individuals from the zoo's population were kept in an acclimatization enclosure, but did not survive subsequent release into the wild.[68]

In captivity edit

 
Sand cat in Bristol Zoo, England

Since the mid 1960s, sand cats were captured in Pakistan for trade and export to Europe until the Pakistani government ceased issuing permits in 1974.[69] Captive sand cats are highly sensitive to respiratory diseases and infection of the upper respiratory tract. This is the main cause of death in adults. The most common disease is infectious rhinotracheitis. With sand cats being very susceptible to respiratory infections, they have to be kept in very arid enclosures, where humidity and temperature do not fluctuate.[63]

The captive population kept in the European Endangered Species Programme is offspring of 18 founders that originated almost exclusively on the Arabian Peninsula. Until December 2009, the global captive population comprised 200 individuals in 45 institutions, including 23 European zoos with 102 individuals.[70] The captive population within the Species Survival Plan for sand cat is based on eight founders.[71]

In 2010, two sand cat kittens were born at the Al Ain Zoo after the first procedure of in vitro fertilisation and transfer of frozen-thawed embryos into the oviducts of ovulating females.[72] In July 2012, four sand cat kittens were born at the Ramat Gan Zoo as part of the European Endangered Species Programme.[73]

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External links edit

  • "Sand Cat Working Group".
  • "Sand Cat". IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group.
  • Sand Cat: The King of the Desert. Animalogic. 2020. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12.
  • Sand Cat: How does this cat survive in the desert without water? Sand cat versus snakes and scorpion. Wildopedia. 2021.

sand, armored, vehicle, plasan, sand, sand, felis, margarita, small, wild, that, inhabits, sandy, stony, deserts, from, water, sources, with, sandy, light, grey, well, camouflaged, desert, environment, head, body, length, ranges, from, with, long, tail, short,. For the armored vehicle see Plasan Sand Cat The sand cat Felis margarita is a small wild cat that inhabits sandy and stony deserts far from water sources With its sandy to light grey fur it is well camouflaged in a desert environment Its head and body length ranges from 39 52 cm 15 20 in with a 23 31 cm 9 1 12 2 in long tail Its 5 7 cm 2 0 2 8 in short ears are set low on the sides of the head aiding detection of prey moving underground The long hair covering the soles of its paws insulates its pads against the extreme temperatures found in deserts Sand catConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraSuborder FeliformiaFamily FelidaeSubfamily FelinaeGenus FelisSpecies F margaritaBinomial nameFelis margaritaLoche 1858SubspeciesF m margarita Loche 1858 F m thinobia Ognev 1927 Distribution of the sand cat in 2016 1 Synonyms 2 synonyms of F margarita Felis marginata Gray 1867F margaritae Trouessart 1897F marguerittei Trouessart 1905Otocolobus margarita Heptner and Dementiev 1937 synonyms of F m margarita F m meinertzhageni Pocock 1938F m airensis Pocock 1938 synonyms of F m thinobius Eremaelurus thinobius Ognev 1926Felis thinobius Pocock 1938F m scheffeli Hemmer 1974F m harrisoni Hemmer Grubb and Groves 1976The first sand cat known to scientists was discovered in the Algerian Sahara and described in 1858 To date it has been recorded in several disjunct locations in Western Sahara Morocco Algeria Niger Chad Egypt the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East In Central Asia it was first recorded in the Karakum Desert in 1925 The large gap between these two regions of its global range was partially closed in 1948 when a sand cat skin was found in an oasis of the Rub al Khali in Oman It is discontinuously distributed in the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East In the early 1970s sand cats were caught in southwestern Pakistan and exported to zoos worldwide Due to its wide distribution and large population it is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List The sand cat usually rests in underground dens during the day and hunts at night It moves 5 4 km 3 4 mi on average at night in search of small rodents and birds It also kills and consumes venomous snakes In spring the female gives birth to two to three kittens which become sexually mature around the age of one year The sand cat s ecological requirements are still poorly understood as only a few in depth studies targeting wild sand cat populations have been conducted Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Phylogeny 2 Characteristics 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Hunting and diet 4 2 Reproduction and life cycle 5 Threats 6 Conservation 6 1 In captivity 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp Sand cat at Ree Park zoo DenmarkFelis margarita was the scientific name proposed by Victor Loche in 1858 who first described a sand cat specimen found in the area of Negonca in the northern Algerian Sahara 3 This holotype specimen appears to have been lost 4 5 The species was named after the French General Jean Auguste Margueritte 6 In the 20th century the following zoological specimens of sand cats were described Eremaelurus thinobius was proposed as a species by Sergey Ognev in 1926 The specimen had been collected in the eastern Karakum Desert in Turkmenistan 7 In 1938 Reginald Innes Pocock also considered it a species but subordinated it to the genus Felis using the scientific name Felis thinobius 8 Later he considered it a sand cat subspecies 9 which to date is widely recognised 4 10 5 11 6 F m meinertzhageni proposed by Pocock in 1938 was a sand cat skin from the Algerian Sahara 8 F m airensis proposed by Pocock in 1938 was a female specimen collected in the Air Mountains in 1937 12 F m scheffeli proposed by German zoologist Helmut Hemmer in 1974 was described on the basis of seven sand cats that had been captured alive in Pakistan s Nushki desert 13 F m harrisoni proposed by Hemmer Grubb and Groves in 1976 was described on the basis of a skin and skull of an adult male sand cat captured in 1967 in Umm al Samim Oman 14 In 1974 F m margarita F m thinobia and F m scheffeli were temporarily recognized as valid taxa At the time it was considered possible that sand cats eventually recorded in Afghanistan and Iran might constitute distinct subspecies 5 In 2005 F m margarita F m thinobia F m scheffeli and F m harrisoni were recognised as valid taxa by W Chris Wozencraft who considered F m meinertzhageni and F m airensis synonyms of the nominate subspecies F m margarita 2 The Cat Classification Task Force of the Cat Specialist Group reviewed the existing information and in 2017 recognized only two subspecies based on morphological differences namely 15 nbsp An Arabian sand cat at Osnabruck Zoo GermanyFelis margarita margarita also called the Saharan sand cat occurs in North Africa It is smaller in size with brighter more yellow fur with more pronounced markings and 2 6 rings on the tail 15 Felis margarita thinobia also called the Turkestan sand cat Arabian sand cat and Pakistan sand cat it occurs in West and Central Asia It is larger in size with less pronounced markings a darker more greyish coat and only 2 3 rings on the tail 15 16 Analysis of mitochondrial DNA of 47 individuals from across the sand cat s range showed that their haplotypes differed only by one to three base pair mutations This low degree of genetic differentiation between the African and Asian sand cats indicates that the Sinai Peninsula may have been a barrier to gene flow 16 Phylogeny edit Phylogenetic analysis of the nuclear DNA in tissue samples from all Felidae species revealed that the evolutionary radiation of the Felidae began in Asia in the Miocene around 14 45 to 8 38 million years ago 17 18 Analysis of mitochondrial DNA of all Felidae species indicates a radiation at around 16 76 to 6 46 million years ago 19 The sand cat is part of an evolutionary lineage that is estimated to have genetically diverged from the common ancestor of the Felis species around 4 44 to 2 16 million years ago based on analysis of their nuclear DNA 17 18 Analysis of their mitochondrial DNA indicates a genetic divergence of the Felis species at around 6 52 to 1 03 million years ago 19 Both models agree that the jungle cat F chaus was the first Felis species that diverged followed by the black footed cat F nigripes and then the sand cat 17 19 It migrated into Africa possibly during Pleistocene glaciation events 17 Migration was likely facilitated by extended periods of low sea levels between continents 19 A fossil jaw and other skeletal remains of a sand cat were excavated in a Late Pleistocene cave in El Harhoura located near Temara in Morocco 20 Phylogenetic relationships of the sand cat as derived through analysis ofnuclear DNA 17 Felidae Felinae Felis Domestic cat F catus European wildcat F silvestris African wildcat F lybica Chinese mountain cat F bieti Sand catBlack footed catJungle catother Felinae lineagesPantherinaemitochondrial DNA 19 Felidae Felinae Felis Domestic catChinese mountain catAfrican wildcatEuropean wildcatSand catBlack footed catJungle catother Felinae lineagesPantherinaeCharacteristics edit nbsp Sand cat in Cincinnati Zoo nbsp Illustration of a sand cat skull 21 The sand cat s fur is of a pale sandy isabelline colour but much lighter on the lower part of the head around the nose throat and on the belly A faint reddish line runs from the outer corner of each eye across the cheeks 3 There are dark brown to blackish bars on the limbs and the tail has a black tip with two or three dark rings alternating with buff bands Markings vary between individuals some have neither spots nor stripes some are faintly spotted some have both spots and stripes 5 Its head is sandy brown The large greenish yellow eyes are ringed with white and the nose is blackish 22 Its whiskers are white and up to 8 cm 3 1 in long 6 Its ears are tawny at the base and tipped with black 11 Its outer ear is similar to that of a domestic cat but its ear canal is about twice the size The magnitude of acoustic input admittance is about five times higher than of a domestic cat Additionally hearing sensitivity of the sand cat is about 8 decibels greater than that of the domestic cat 23 In Central Asia the sand cat s winter coat is very long and thick with hairs reaching up to 51 mm 2 in in length Its claws on the forelimbs are short and very sharp and claws on the hind feet are small and blunt 24 The undersides of its paws are protected from extreme temperatures by a thick covering of fur 5 The long hairs growing between its toes create a cushion of fur over the foot pads helping to insulate them while moving over hot sand This feature makes the cat s tracks obscure and difficult to identify and follow 25 The sand cat is characterized by a flat wide head short legs and a relatively long tail of 23 31 cm 9 1 12 2 in It stands 24 36 cm 9 4 14 2 in at the shoulder and weighs 1 5 3 4 kg 3 3 7 5 lb The head and body length ranges from 39 52 cm 15 20 in The 5 7 cm 2 0 2 8 in long ears are set low giving a broad flat appearance to the head 11 Its skull is arched in lateral outline with wide zygomatic arches The pinnae of the ears are triangular and the ear canal is very wide giving the cat an enhanced sense of hearing The auditory bullae and the passages from the external ears to the ear drums are greatly enlarged compared to other small wild cats the inner parts of the ears are protected from foreign objects by long closely spaced white hairs 21 It has a bite force at the canine tip of 155 4 Newton and a bite force quotient at the canine tip of 136 7 26 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Captive sand catThe sand cat inhabits both sandy and stony deserts It is widely but not contiguously distributed in the deserts of North Africa and Southwest and Central Asia 14 It prefers flat or undulating terrain with sparse vegetation of grasses or small bushes it avoids bare and shifting sand dunes where little prey is available 27 In the Western Sahara sand cats were sighted and photographed in the Dakhla Oued Ed Dahab region several times between 2005 and 2016 28 29 30 31 Sand cat kittens that had been hiding beneath a tuft of Panicum turgidum grass were sighted and photographed in the area in April 2017 32 In Algeria one individual was recorded near a salt cedar mound in the Ahaggar Mountains in 2008 33 No confirmed records are known in Mauritania Tunisia and Libya In Mali s Lake Faguibine area one individual was shortly sighted by night in 2011 1 In the Tenere Desert sand cats were observed in the 1980s and between 2008 and 2015 27 34 Sightings in Egypt s rocky Western and Eastern Deserts date to the mid 1980s 35 In the Sinai peninsula sand cats were sighted in the mid 1990s 36 On the Arabian Peninsula a sand cat skin was discovered by Wilfred Thesiger in 1948 in an oasis of the Rub al Khali desert 37 In Saudi Arabia s Mahazat as Sayd Protected Area sand cats were captured and encountered trapped in wire mesh fence surrounding the adjacent Saja Umm Ar Rimth Natural Reserve in the country s Najd region 38 39 40 In the Tabuk Region two sand cats were killed by hunters in 2013 and 2016 and one individual was captured by a local farmer in 2014 and kept in a cage 41 Sand cats were also observed in 2014 2015 in three localities in the Turaif area in northern Saudi Arabia 42 In Uruq Bani Ma arid on the western edge of the Rub al Khali sand cats use gravel valley and sand dune habitats in the cool season from October to April in the hot season from May to September they mainly use sand dune habitat 43 In Al Ain Region of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi a sand cat was sighted in a gravel plain between dunes in 2003 44 Several sand cats were recorded in a protected area in Al Dhafra Abu Dhabi between April and December 2015 after an absence of sightings for ten years 45 In Oman s Dhofar Governorate it was recorded at several locations between 2021 and 2022 46 In southern Israel four sand cats were radio collared and tracked over a few months in the late 1980s in the Arabah Valley which lies mostly in Jordan The monitored sand cats frequently roamed in military camps of the Israeli army and crossed the international border 25 Since 2002 the sand cat is considered locally extinct in Israel as it has not been recorded since the turn of the century 47 In Jordan a sand cat was sighted for the first time in 1997 during a survey in a desert area in the eastern part of the country 48 In Syria sand cats were sighted and photographed by a camera trap in a protected area near Palmyra in 2000 and 2001 49 In western Iraq sand cats inhabit desert areas in the Najaf Muthanna and Al Anbar Governorates 50 51 In Iran it occurs in arid flat plains and sandy desert of Abbas abad Wildlife Reserve Kavir National Park and Petergan Rural District 52 Between March 2014 and July 2016 sand cats were also observed at elevations of 900 1 100 m 3 000 3 600 ft in Sistan and Baluchestan Province foremost in black saxaul dominated habitat 53 In central Iran sand cats were observed foremost in sand dunes and sabulous areas during surveys in 2014 2016 54 In Pakistan the first sand cat was detected in 1966 near the Lora River in Balochistan In the late 1960s sand cats were also encountered in the Chagai Hills an extremely arid area comprising rolling sand dunes and stony plains at an elevation of about 1 200 m 3 900 ft 55 In Central Asia the sand cat was known to occur up to the late 1960s in the Karakum Desert from the Ustyurt Plateau in the northwest to the Kopet Dag Mountains in the south and from the Kyzylkum Desert to the Syr Darya River and the northern border to Afghanistan 24 Adult sand cats with kittens were photographed in the southern Kyzylkum Desert in spring 2013 and 2014 56 Behaviour and ecology editThe sand cat is solitary except during the mating season and when a female has kittens 22 It makes loud high pitched and short rasping sounds especially when seeking a mate Its vocalizations are similar to those of the domestic cat 13 It communicates by urine spraying and using scent and scratch marks 57 It buries its feces and covers it with sand 27 Its way of moving is distinct with its belly close to the ground it moves at a fast run punctuated with occasional leaps It is capable of sudden bursts of speed and can sprint at speeds of 30 40 km 19 25 mi per hour 27 Four radio collared sand cats in Israel moved long distances of 5 10 km 3 1 6 2 mi in a single night They were generally active throughout the night hunting and travelling an average distance of 5 4 km 3 4 mi They retired below ground at dawn and stayed in the burrow during the day During the survey period they used several burrows in their home ranges 25 Burrows are about 1 5 m 4 ft 11 in deep and dug in slightly slanting ground with usually only a single entrance though burrows with two or three entrances have also been observed These burrows were either abandoned by foxes or porcupines or dug by gerbils or other rodents In winter sand cats stay in the sun during the day but during the hot season they are crepuscular and nocturnal 5 A male sand cat in Israel had a home range of 16 km2 6 2 sq mi 58 In Morocco a male sand cat travelled 14 1 km 8 8 mi in 30 hours A female sand cat moved in an area of 13 4 km2 5 2 sq mi during six days and two males had home ranges of 21 8 and 35 3 km2 8 4 and 13 6 sq mi 31 In 2018 several sand cats were observed resting in brown necked raven nests built in umbrella thorn acacia trees in the Moroccan Sahara 59 Hunting and diet edit In the Tenere a desert region in south central Sahara sand cats were observed preying foremost on small rodents and the young of cape hare Lepus capensis but also hunting greater hoopoe lark Alaemon alaudipes desert monitor Varanus griseus sandfish Scincus scincus and venomous Cerastes vipers If they caught more than they could eat they buried the remains for later consumption They satisfied their moisture requirements from their prey but drank water if it was available The Toubou people have reported incidents of sand cats coming to their camps at night and drinking fresh camel milk 27 In Israel remains of Egyptian spiny tailed lizards Uromastyx aegyptia were found near burrows used by sand cats 60 They were observed preying on jirds Meriones Cairo spiny mouse Acomys cahirinus desert lark Ammomanes deserti and small reptiles 25 In central Iran remains of Blanford s jerboa Jaculus blanfordi and Balochistan gerbil Gerbillus nanus were the most frequent prey species found around dens of sand cats 61 Sand cats were collected in eastern Karakum Desert in the late 1950s Their feces and stomachs contained remains of tolai hare Lepus tolai small rodents birds small reptiles and invertebrates 24 In March 2018 a sand cat was recorded feeding on a MacQueen s bustard Chlamydotis macqueenii in the Kyzylkum Desert 62 Reproduction and life cycle edit nbsp A captive sand cat kittenOestrus in female sand cats lasts from five to six days during which they frequently call and scent mark After a gestation of 59 to 66 days they give birth to a litter of two to three kittens The kittens weigh 39 to 80 g 1 4 to 2 8 oz at birth and have spotted pale yellow or reddish fur They grow relatively rapidly reaching three quarters of the adult size within five months are fully independent by the end of their first year and reach sexual maturity soon after the first year 57 In some areas sand cats give birth to two litters per year 27 Of 228 sand cats born in zoos globally by 2007 only 61 of the kittens lived to day 30 They died primarily due to maternal neglect by first time mothers Otherwise they can live up to 13 years in captivity 63 The life expectancy of wild sand cats has not been documented 64 22 The generation length of the sand cat is about 4 years and 9 months 65 Threats editHabitat degradation and loss of sand dunes due to human activities are considered major threats to sand cat populations in Western Asia where uncontrolled hunting and persecution of predators using poisoned baits are common practices 49 66 67 The sand cat s small mammal prey base depends on having adequate vegetation which may experience large fluctuations due to drought or declines due to desertification and loss of natural vegetation 1 Fencing of protected areas threatens the sand cat in Saudi Arabia where several individuals were found stuck in fences 40 In Iran vulnerable arid ecosystems are being rapidly degraded by human settlement and activity especially livestock grazing 52 In Uzbekistan drifting sand areas are increasing as local people uproot shrubs for use as firewood and as a substrate for silk worm Bombyx mori cocoons 56 62 In the Sahara sand cats have been killed in traps laid out by inhabitants of oases targeting foxes and golden jackals Canis aureus or in retaliation for killing poultry 27 Several cases of sand cats having been killed by domestic dogs C familiaris were reported in Israel and Iran 60 52 In Israel the sand cat was thought to be threatened by predation from caracals Caracal caracal and wolves Canis lupus 60 Sand cats have also been caught for the pet trade in the United Arab Emirates and in Iraq 44 66 50 51 In Baghdad two sand cats were presented to a local nursery in 2012 that had been sold as pets they died a week later 50 In 2014 and 2015 four sand cats were trapped alive by local truffle collectors and offered for sale in a wildlife market in Baghdad their fate is unknown 51 Sand cats may be at risk of transfer of diseases from domestic and feral cats encroaching on desert areas In Saudi Arabia one of 17 wild caught sand cats was tested positive for feline leukaemia virus 38 Conservation editFelis margarita is listed on CITES Appendix II Hunting is prohibited in Algeria Iran Israel Kazakhstan Mauritania Niger Pakistan and Tunisia No legal protection exists in Egypt Mali Morocco Oman Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates 64 Previously having been classified as near threatened it has been downlisted to least concern in 2016 as the estimated size of the global population exceeds the threshold for a threatened category the extent of decline of the global population is unknown 1 The Jerusalem Biblical Zoo started a sand cat reintroduction project in Israel s Arabah Desert Several captive born individuals from the zoo s population were kept in an acclimatization enclosure but did not survive subsequent release into the wild 68 In captivity edit nbsp Sand cat in Bristol Zoo EnglandSince the mid 1960s sand cats were captured in Pakistan for trade and export to Europe until the Pakistani government ceased issuing permits in 1974 69 Captive sand cats are highly sensitive to respiratory diseases and infection of the upper respiratory tract This is the main cause of death in adults The most common disease is infectious rhinotracheitis With sand cats being very susceptible to respiratory infections they have to be kept in very arid enclosures where humidity and temperature do not fluctuate 63 The captive population kept in the European Endangered Species Programme is offspring of 18 founders that originated almost exclusively on the Arabian Peninsula Until December 2009 the global captive population comprised 200 individuals in 45 institutions including 23 European zoos with 102 individuals 70 The captive population within the Species Survival Plan for sand cat is based on eight founders 71 In 2010 two sand cat kittens were born at the Al Ain Zoo after the first procedure of in vitro fertilisation and transfer of frozen thawed embryos into the oviducts of ovulating females 72 In July 2012 four sand cat kittens were born at the Ramat Gan Zoo as part of the European Endangered Species Programme 73 References edit a b c d e f Sliwa A Ghadirian T Appel A Banfield L Sher Shah M amp Wacher T 2016 Felis margarita IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T8541A50651884 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 2 RLTS T8541A50651884 en Retrieved 24 January 2022 a b Wozencraft W C 2005 Species Felis margarita 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 536 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b Loche V 1858 Description d une nouvelle espece de Chat Description of a new species of cat Revue et Magasin de Zoologie Pure et Appliquee 2 X 49 50 a b Haltenorth T 1953 Lebende arabische Sandkatze Felis margarita Loche 1858 Live Arabian sand cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Saugetierkundliche Mitteilungen 1 71 73 a b c d e f Schauenberg P 1974 Donnees nouvelles sur le Chat des sables Felis margarita Loche 1858 New data on the Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Revue Suisse de Zoologie 81 4 949 969 doi 10 5962 bhl part 76053 a b c Cole F R amp Wilson D E 2015 Felis margarita Carnivora Felidae Mammalian Species 47 924 63 77 doi 10 1093 mspecies sev007 Ognev S 1926 A new genus and species of cat from the Transcaspian region Annuaire du Musee Zoologique Academie des Sciences USSR 27 356 362 a b Pocock R I 1938 The Algerian sand cat Felis margarita Loche Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London B 108 1 41 46 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1938 tb00021 x Pocock R I 1951 Felis margarita Loche Catalogue of the genus Felis London British Museum Natural History pp 139 145 Ellerman J R amp Morrison Scott T C S 1966 Felis margarita Loche 1858 Sand Cat Checklist of Palaearctic and Indian mammals 1758 to 1946 Second ed London British Museum of Natural History pp 307 308 a b c Sliwa A 2013 Felis margarita Sand Cat In Kingdon J Hoffmann M eds Mammals of Africa Vol V Carnivores Pangolins Equids and Rhinoceroses London UK Bloomsbury Publishing pp 199 202 ISBN 978 1408189962 Pocock R I 1938 A new race of the sand cat Felis margarita Annals and Magazine of Natural History Series 11 1 4 472 476 doi 10 1080 00222933808526790 a b Hemmer H 1974 Studien zur Systematik und Biologie der Sandkatze Felis margarita Loche 1858 Studies on the systematics and biology of the sand cat Zeitschrift des Kolner Zoo 17 1 11 20 a b Hemmer H Grubb P amp Groves C P 1976 Notes on the sand cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 PDF Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 41 286 303 a b c 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 14 15 a b Howard McCombe J Banfield L Kitchener A C Al Qahtani H Toosy A Al Qarqas M Craig M Abramov A V Veron G Brito J C Azizi S Ghazali M Breton G Sliwa A Kaltwasser K Hochkirch A amp Senn H 2019 A Mitochondrial Phylogeny of the Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Journal of Mammalian Evolution 2019 3 525 534 doi 10 1007 s10914 019 09473 w S2CID 198190254 a b c d e 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 a b 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 Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 59 82 ISBN 978 0 19 923445 5 a b c d e Li G Davis B W Eizirik E amp Murphy W J 2016 Phylogenomic evidence for ancient hybridization in the genomes of living cats Felidae Genome Research 26 1 1 11 doi 10 1101 gr 186668 114 PMC 4691742 PMID 26518481 Aouraghe H 2000 Les carnivores fossiles d El Harhoura 1 Temara Maroc L Anthropologie 104 147 171 doi 10 1016 S0003 5521 00 90007 4 a b Osborn D amp Helmy I 1980 Felis margarita Loche 1858 The contemporary land mammals of Egypt including Sinai Fieldiana Zoology New Series Vol 5 Chicago Field Museum of Natural History pp 444 447 a b c Sunquist M amp Sunquist F 2002 Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Wild Cats of the World Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 67 74 ISBN 978 0 226 77999 7 Huang G Rosowski J Ravicz M amp Peake W 2002 Mammalian ear specializations in arid habitats structural and functional evidence from Sand Cat Felis margarita Journal of Comparative Physiology A 188 9 663 681 doi 10 1007 s00359 002 0332 8 PMID 12397438 S2CID 25405385 a b c Heptner V G amp Sludskij A A 1992 1972 Sand Cat Mlekopitajuscie Sovetskogo Soiuza Moskva Vyssaia Skola Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol Volume II Part 2 Carnivora Hyaenas and Cats Washington DC Smithsonian Institution and the National Science Foundation pp 636 665 a b c d Abbadi M 1991 Israel s elusive feline Sand Cats Israel Land and Nature 16 3 111 115 Christiansen P amp Wroe S 2007 Bite forces and evolutionary adaptations to feeding ecology in carnivores Ecology 88 2 347 358 doi 10 1890 0012 9658 2007 88 347 bfaeat 2 0 co 2 PMID 17479753 a b c d e f g Dragesco Joffe A 1993 Le chat des sables un redoutable chasseur de serpents The Sand Cat a formidable snake hunter La Vie Sauvage au Sahara Wildlife in the Sahara Lausanne and Paris Delachaux et Niestle pp 129 133 ISBN 978 2603008713 Chevalier F Thevenot M amp Bergier P 2012 Notes sur quelques mammiferes terrestres observes pres de Dakhla Oued Ad Deheb Go South Bulletin 9 1 6 Moores R Brown D amp Martin R 2012 New data on the terrestrial mammals of the Oued Ad Dehab region of Western Sahara Go South Bulletin 9 133 135 Sliwa A Breton G amp Chevalier F 2013 Sand Cat sightings in the Moroccan Sahara Cat News 59 28 30 a b Breton G Sliwa A Azizi S amp Essalhi A 2016 Sand Cats in the Moroccan Sahara preliminary results of a new study Cat News 63 7 10 Sliwa A Azizi S Alifal E Essalhi A Endichi M amp Breton G 2017 First sand cat kittens sighted in the Moroccan Sahara Cat News 66 19 20 Belbachir F 2009 Spotted the elusive Sand Cat in Algerian Ahaggar Mountains central Sahara Cat News 50 17 18 Rabeil T Wacher T amp Newby J 2016 Sand cat sightings in Niger and Chad Cat News 63 11 Goodman S M amp Helmy I 1986 The Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1958 in Egypt Mammalia 50 120 123 Saleh M A amp Basuony M 1998 A contribution to the mammalogy of the Sinai Peninsula Mammalia 62 4 557 575 doi 10 1515 mamm 1998 62 4 557 S2CID 84960581 Hayman R W amp Harrison D L 1950 Notes on some mammals newly recorded from Arabia Annals and Magazine of Natural History 12 3 29 417 419 doi 10 1080 00222935008654065 a b Ostrowski S Van Vuuren M Lenain D M amp Durand A 2003 A serologic survey of wild felids from central west Saudi Arabia Journal of Wildlife Diseases 39 3 696 701 doi 10 7589 0090 3558 39 3 696 PMID 14567233 S2CID 25416007 Strauss W M Shobrak M amp Sher Shah M 2007 First trapping results from a new sand cat study in Saudi Arabia Cat News 47 20 21 a b Sher Shah M amp Cunningham P 2008 Fences as a threat to Sand cats Felis margarita Loche 1958 in Saudi Arabia Zoology in the Middle East 42 1 99 101 doi 10 1080 09397140 2008 10638294 S2CID 86466096 Aloufi A A amp Amr Z S 2018 Carnivores of the Tabuk Province Saudi Arabia Carnivora Canidae Felidae Hyaenidae Mustelidae Lynx New Series 49 1 77 90 doi 10 2478 lynx 2018 0010 Paray B A amp Al Sadoon M K 2018 A survey of mammal diversity in the Turaif province Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences 25 3 604 608 doi 10 1016 j sjbs 2018 02 012 PMC 5910653 PMID 29686525 Amin R Wacher T Bruce T amp Barichievy C 2021 The status and ecology of the sand cat in the Uruq Bani Ma arid Protected Area Empty Quarter of Saudi Arabia Mammalia 85 3 220 226 doi 10 1515 mammalia 2020 0031 a b Cunningham P 2002 Status of the Sand Cat Felis margarita in the United Arab Emirates Zoology in the Middle East 25 1 9 14 doi 10 1080 09397140 2002 10637898 S2CID 83659961 Ahmed S Al Zaabi R Soorae P Shah J N Al Hammadi E Pusey R amp Al Dhaheri S 2016 Rediscovering the Arabian sand cat Felis margarita harrisoni after a gap of 10 years using camera traps in the Western Region of Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates European Journal of Wildlife Research 62 5 627 631 doi 10 1007 s10344 016 1035 8 S2CID 779635 Al Hikmani H Jadad M Zaabanoot R Al Rasbi A Al Hikmani K amp Spalton A 2022 First records of Sand Cat in Dhofar Governorate Oman Cat News 76 22 23 Dolev A amp Perevolotsky A 2004 The Red Book vertebrates in Israel Jerusalem Nature and Parks Authority and The Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel ISBN 965 90466 0 X Bunaian F Mashaqbeh S Yousef M Buduri A amp Amr Z S 1998 A new record of the Sand Cat Felis margarita from Jordan Zoology in the Middle East 16 1 5 7 doi 10 1080 09397140 1998 10637748 a b Serra G Abdallah M S amp Al Quaim G 2007 Occurrence of Ruppell s fox Vulpes rueppelli and Sand cat Felis margarita in Syria PDF Zoology in the Middle East 42 1 99 101 doi 10 1080 09397140 2007 10638252 S2CID 84492343 a b c Mohammad M K Lahony S R amp Al Rammahi H M 2013 First record of the Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Mammalia Carnivora Felidae from Iraq Zoology in the Middle East 59 4 358 359 doi 10 1080 09397140 2013 868144 S2CID 85019590 a b c Al Sheikhly O F amp Haba M K 2017 Additional records of the Arabian Sand Cat Felis margarita harrisoni Hemmer Grubb amp Groves 1976 Carnivora Felidae in Iraq PDF Bonn Zoological Bulletin 66 2 135 137 a b c Ghadirian T Akbari H Besmeli M Ghoddousi A Hamidi A K amp Dehkordi M E 2016 Sand cat in Iran present status distribution and conservation challenges PDF Cat News Special Issue 10 56 59 Ghafaripour S Naderi M amp Rezaei H R 2017 Investigating abundance density and potential threats of Sand Cat in the South Eastern parts of Iran PDF Journal of Wildlife and Biodiversity 1 1 47 55 Feizabadi H A Naderi M Ashrafi S amp Hemami M R 2018 Space Partitioning among Two Sympatric Species Sand Cat Felis margarita and Ruppell s Fox Vulpes rueppellii in a Desert Landscape in Central Iran Polish Journal of Ecology 66 2 194 204 doi 10 3161 15052249PJE2018 66 2 009 S2CID 91495440 Roberts T 1977 Felis margarita The Mammals of Pakistan London Ernest Benn pp 142 143 ISBN 9780510399009 a b Burnside J R Koshkin M amp Dolman P M 2014 Breeding population of sand cat in the Southern Kyzylkum Desert Uzbekistan Cat News 60 25 26 a b Mellen J D 1993 A comparative analysis of scent marking social and reproductive behavior in 20 species of small cats Felis American Zoologist 33 2 151 166 doi 10 1093 icb 33 2 151 Abbadi M 1993 Israel s elusive feline sand cats Cat News 18 15 16 Bompar J M Durand E Durand S amp Perrier T 2019 Unusual resting places of sand cat in Moroccan Sahara PDF Cat News 69 8 9 a b c Mendelssohn H 1989 Felids in Israel Cat News 10 2 4 Ghafaripour S Naderi M Riazi B amp Rezaei H R 2018 How Prey Density and Distribution Can Affect Predator Habitat Usage Pattern a Case Study on Sand Cat Felis margarita Locke 1858 from Iran PDF Russian Journal of Ecology 49 4 320 324 Bibcode 2018RuJEc 49 320G doi 10 1134 S1067413618040057 S2CID 49726544 a b Brighten A L amp Burnside R J 2019 Insights into the feeding ecology of and threats to Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 Mammalia Carnivora Felidae in the Kyzylkum Desert Uzbekistan Journal of Threatened Taxa 11 4 13492 13496 doi 10 11609 jott 4445 11 4 13492 13496 a b Sausman K 1997 Sand cat a true desert species International Zoo Yearbook 35 78 81 doi 10 1111 j 1748 1090 1997 tb01193 x a b Nowell K amp Jackson P 1996 Sand Cat Felis margarita Wild Cats Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan Gland Switzerland IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group pp 47 50 Archived from the original on 2014 09 10 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 doi 10 3897 natureconservation 5 5734 a b Mallon D amp Budd K 2011 Sand Cat Felis margarita Loche 1858 PDF Regional Red List Status of Carnivores in the Arabian Peninsula Cambridge UK and Gland Switzerland IUCN and Sharjah UAE Environment and Protected Areas Authority pp 18 19 Banfield L M al Qahtani H amp Mallon D 2014 Arabian Sand CatFelis margarita harrisoniStatus Review and Conservation Strategy Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates Al Ain Zoo Jerusalem Biblical Zoo 2010 Re introduction Sand cats PDF The Biblical Zoo for the Conservation of Nature in Israel Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 12 Roberts T 1984 Cats in Pakistan In Jackson P ed The plight of the cats Proceedings from the Cat Specialist Group meeting in Kanha National Park India 9 12 April 1984 Gland Cat Specialist Group pp 151 154 Witzenberger K A amp Hochkirch A 2013 Evaluating ex situ conservation projects Genetic structure of the captive population of the Arabian sand cat PDF Mammalian Biology 78 5 379 382 doi 10 1016 j mambio 2013 03 001 Swanson W F 2006 Application of assisted reproduction for population management in felids The potential and reality for conservation of small cats PDF Theriogenology 66 1 49 58 doi 10 1016 j theriogenology 2006 03 024 PMID 16650889 S2CID 46306166 Herrick J R Mehrdadfar F Campbell M Levens G Leiske K amp Swanson W F 2010 Birth of Sand Cat Felis margarita Kittens Following In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Transfer Biology of Reproduction 83 Supplement 1 28 doi 10 1093 biolreprod 83 s1 28 Krystian M 2012 Rare Sand Kittens Born in Israel After Years of Rumored Extinction The International Business Times TV Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Felis margarita nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Felis margarita Sand Cat Working Group Sand Cat IUCN SSC Cat Specialist Group Sand Cat The King of the Desert Animalogic 2020 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Sand Cat How does this cat survive in the desert without water Sand cat versus snakes and scorpion Wildopedia 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sand cat amp oldid 1201957960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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