|
Jaguarondi
-
Herpailurus yagouarundi
Weight:
16 pounds
Head/Body: 26 inches
Tail: 18 inches
8 subspecies
Often mistaken for an otter because of
its peculiar shape and appearance, the jaguarondi has a long sinuous body,
very short legs, a flattened tail, and a long flattened head with a short
nose and very small low-set round ears. Similar to the flat-headed cat but
even more extreme in appearance. Its coat comes in two color phases,
brownish-gray to black and bright reddish-brown, which readily interbreed,
producing young of both phases in their litter. Both phases shade to white
on their undersides. The jaguarondi may be found in lowland forests, scrub
and chaparral of South and North America south of the southwestern US,
where it hunts by night and by day in the afternoon, from the ground, and
seeks mainly birds and the occasional rodent. It fills the same ecological
niche as the raccoon, weasel, otter, or stoat, and occasionally has
territorial clashes with them.
|