|
Weight:
9-18 pounds
Head/Body: 26 inches
Tail: 16 inches
Subspecies: 11
The margay has a slim, graceful body
with long legs and a long tail. Its coat is a light yellowish- brown with
striking dark brown irregular spots, which may form rosettes. Its tail is
ringed. The margay may be found in the forests of the Yucatan and Central
and South America, and one subspecies near the Texas-Mexico border, where
it hunts by day, from trees, and seeks small mammals, birds, tree frogs,
and lizards. The margay is without question the best climber of all cats.
It runs up and down the trees like a squirrel, virtually living in them
from birth to death -- which is almost never by falling. So well adapted
is the margay to arboreal life that its feet are extraordinarily flexible,
with the hind feet capable of turning completely around. Its claws are
also exceptionally strong and sharp. It is not unusual for a margay to be
discovered hanging head downward from one hind foot while it catches a
quick nap seventy feet in the air.
 |