Wildlife Conservation Organizations Dedicated to the protection and preservation of endangered felines. the preservationof wild (cats) throughout the Service to work with endangered and threatened http://www.responsiblewildlifemanagement.org/conservation_links.htm
Extractions: WILDLIFE CONSERVATION LINKS Responsible wildlife management is no small matter to be taken lightly. How we manage our interactions with all species is a difficult, complex matter as there are numerous social, economic, cultural, biological and species-specific issues that must be addressed in every management decision. We offer the following links organized into three categories: Organizations, Research Resources and Map Resources. Hundreds of new web sites are launched every day. Accordingly, the lists provided here are not intended to be "all inclusive" but rather representative of the available resources. A listing in our Links Library does not constitute an endorsement of any political position, product, service or wildlife control technique. The highlighted text for each listing is an active link that will open in a new browser window. Conservation Research Links Map Links African Wildlife Foundation Working with the people of Africa to protect their natural resources. AfriCat Foundation A non-profit organization with a mission to conserve the big cats of Africa by working on short, medium and long term solutions to allow for the coexistence of these predators.
Rescue Links responsible homes for captivebred wild felines, and promoting a healthy, lovinghome to threatened, endangered and displaced big (cats) and other http://www.wtv-zone.com/BigCats/links/rescuelist.html
Extractions: non profit big cat sanctuary located in Tampa, FL and is home to over 148 exotic cats representing 18 species. It's residents number over 200 rare and endangered animals. You can help and have fun by coming out for two hour tour, a photo safari, overnight cabin stay, corporate or private party. Help save the big cats through memberships, adoptions and tax deductible donations
Mammals Of The Tikal National Park (CITES Appendix I, USESA endangered (Central and They are threatened by deforestationin Central America is large, long-legged, rangy (cats), slightly swaybacked http://www.tikalpark.com/felines.htm
Extractions: Species: Herpailurus yaguarondi Its upper parts uniform grizzled gray or brown, red or black, no spots identify jaguarundi. It head is small and ears are small and rounded. Its under parts are the same as back or slightly paler. Its feet are small and doglike. They are a long-backed, slender-bodied cat with a long, slender tail, long neck and short legs. They are similar with tayras (Eira barbara) bush dogs (Speothos venaticus) and Pumas (P. concolor). The sound of this mammal is none usually heard in field but makes birdlike chirps. They are diurnal and nocturnal, terrestrial but can climb trees, solitary and in pairs. Feeds on small mammals, birds, and reptiles. Jaguarundis travel widely in a huge home range (13-100 kms2) they den in hollow logs, tree falls and thickets. They are found in many habitats from rainforest to fields, savannas, and dense thickets in scrub, and can live in secondary vegetation near villages, where they may raid poultry. They may be more common in dry forest, secondary forests, and savannas than in rainforests.
Seeking The Missing Lynx I became instantly enthralled with these wild (cats), he recalls wild lynx to do whatall felines do anyway lynx populations as threatened or endangered under the http://www.nwf.org/nationalwildlife/1998/lynx.html
The Living Desert Black-footed Cat Smallest of all felines, the blackfooted cat totals less than a foot and a halfin Is it threatened or endangered? Black-footed (cats) are an endangered species http://www.livingdesert.org/sgblackfootcat.html
Extractions: What does it look like? Black-footed cats have tawny fur with large black spots, and black stripes on their front legs, cheeks and tails. They are named this because the undersides of their feet are black. Black-footed cats inhabit part of Botswana including the Kalahari Desert, Namibia and the interior of South Africa. Their diet consists mostly of mice and other small rodents, and perhaps small reptiles which they unearth by digging with powerful forepaws. The black-footed cat is also known to feed on beetles and spiders. Black-footed cats are nocturnal, hiding during the day in holes made by springhaas, or in hollows that have formed in abandoned termite mounds. This habit of sometimes sheltering in insect mounds has led to its South African nickname of "ant hill tiger." What about offspring?
The Living Desert Caracal These (cats) inhabit dry desert areas, savannas, Acacia scrub, arid steppes faces, caracalsare one of the most handsome felines. Is it threatened or endangered? http://www.livingdesert.org/sgcaracal.html
Extractions: The caracal is a powerful, medium-sized cat with a slender body and slim legs. Their long, pointed ears, tipped with two-inch tufts of black hair, give it a lynx-like appearance. Nicknamed "desert lynx," caracals are found from central India, west through Asia to Israel and Jordan, and south into the Arabian peninsula and African continent. These cats inhabit dry desert areas, savannas, Acacia scrub, arid steppes and mountains. With their long, tasseled ears and expressive faces, caracals are one of the most handsome felines. Carnivores, caracals feed on small birds, rodents and other mammals. With their supple body and swift reflexes, they are adept hunters in a broad range of situations. Hunting often at night, caracals depend on stealth to catch prey.
EWildlife.com | Wildlife Search Engine Directory and 20 or more considered threatened Any thoughts? to the protection and preservationof the world's endangered felines. Home to over 70 (cats), representing 16 http://www.ewildlife.com/search/Animals/African/Lion/index.shtml
Extractions: [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] Wild and New What's Wild+Cool Wildly Popular Searches Go Wild (Random) eWildlife Merchandise ... Wildlife Calendar Wild Picks Top 10 Sites Most Popular Top Categories Last 10 Searches Join eWildlife.com Add Your Link! Advertise About eWildlife Link to us ... Sign Guestbook Wild and Famous Win a Prize Send us a Wild Pic Send us a Story ... Photo Gallery eWildlife Special [an error occurred while processing this directive] Search eWildlife.com Search All of eWildlife.com This Category Only Within your results
Untitled facility dedicated to the preservation of rare and endangered felines, currentlyhousing 50 (cats) representing 14 endangered or threatened species from six http://www.bodfish.com/nearby.htm
Links-Lindsay Wildlife Museum Wild About (cats) Wild About (cats) is the organization homes for captivebred wild felines,and promoting site listing rare, threatened and endangered species and http://www.wildlife-museum.org/links.html
Extractions: Sponsored by the Association of Science and Technology Centers, Try Science is a gateway to experience the excitement of contemporary science and technology through on and offline interactivity with science and technology centers worldwide. Science is exciting and it's for everyone! That's why TryScience and over 400 science centers worldwide (including Lindsay Wildlife Museum) invite you to investigate, discover and try science yourself. You can also find a complete list of science and technology centers that offer free admission to Lindsay Wildlife Museum members. Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Extractions: Site Index: Home News ENN Earthnews Affiliates News In-Depth Topics Interact Online Quizzes Postcards Marketplace Advanced Search Advertise Join ENN e-mail Subscription Take our Survey Affiliate Tech Center Post Press Release Help About ENN Site Map Exotic species are decimating the United States native wildlife Friday, July 19, 2002 By Sally Deneen, E/The Environmental Magazine In one corner of the United States, mountain goats traipse across the fragile alpine flowers that speckle the snowline of Washington's craggy Olympic Mountains. They look beautiful, but the goats don't belong there. Seattle newspaperman E.B. Webster and his mountaineer club 80 years ago pushed to introduce the shaggy-bearded animals to the majestic mountains to boost tourism. So a dozen goats arrived, and the numbers quickly grew to a high of 1,200. Meanwhile, wolves are native to the same mountains of Olympic National Park, but don't expect to hear their nocturnal howls anytime soon. Neighbors objected when rangers a few years ago proposed reintroducing the park's missing predator. To some, it's simple: alien goats, OK; native wolves, not OK. Farther down the island chain, the federal government has forced builders to stop projects in the path of the endangered Lower Keys marsh rabbit. But the feds are virtually powerless when it comes to protecting the rabbits from residents' free-ranging house cats, dogs, and those ubiquitous suburban freeloaders, raccoons. These animals are among the rabbits' other threats, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Extractions: Not Sold Separately This item is available as part of the following set: Endangered Species Set of 12 Stock Number (SKU): US$ Price: Click for More Information If you plan to order any of the above items you can do it any of three ways: Use Express Shopping : Simply click the "Add to Cart" Button for the item you want to order. This puts the item in your Express Shopping Cart, where you can change the quantity or remove it. When you've finished putting items in your Express Shopping Cart, Go to the Shopping Cart and choose your options from there. Use our regular You'll want to be sure to write down the following "8-character Order Blank Code": BLCZ-JS01 Also be sure to copy down the Stock Number (SKU) of each item you wish to order. Orders from this Offer (BLCZ) are only accepted through our web site. This is because of special pricing which is available to www.unicover.com buyers. If you have any question dial TOLL FREE 1-800-443-3232 from throughout the U.S. and Canada.
Phylum Chordata Family Felidae felines((cats)) From The Cyber Zoomobile website, a description ofthe of plants and animals, currently listed as endangered or threatened. http://mclibrary.nhmccd.edu/taxonomy/chordata.html
Florida Panther - Endangered Cat Only 30 to 50 of these big (cats) are known to exist. of the endangered Species Actfor the Florida Panther and other endangered and threatened species. http://cats.about.com/cs/floridapanther/
Extractions: This site is hosted by Netfirms Web Hosting Pounce on your category Home Adopt a Humanoid Books and Videos Animal Causes 1 Animal Causes 2 Cat Webrings 1 Cat Webrings 2 Feline Diseases Health and Care Feline Nutrition Tips and Stories 1 Tips and Stories 2 Tips and Stories 3 Tips and Stories 4 Tips and Stories 5 Big and Wild Cats KittyKat Krib Gallery Guestbook Feline Links About KittyKat FREE If you dare, put your on HDW'S "BIG CATS"!! to learn the History and Culture of Wild Cats (Photo Version also available), view the Big Cat Photo Gallery, hear the Sounds of the Big Cats, visit Tiger Touch (Endangered Feline Sanctuary) and much, much more. While prowling around for big cats, pounce on THE CYBER ZOOMOBILE , your virtual access to the wonders of the animal kingdom which is an interactive realm where you may bring "Big Cats" and many other exotic species into your home. On your journey stop by the International Snow Leopard Trust , who are dedicated to the conservation of the "Endangered Snow Leopard" of Central Asia. Get tbe Facts, learn about their Habitat, purchase a Snow Leopard T-Shirt, learn about the "Programs" aimed at conserving Snow Leopards and their Habitat in the high mountains of Central Asia, and more.
LIOC-ESCF : About Us : History to hinder sales of captive bred endangered species, LIOC members continued to breedtheir felines. Kindt reported the birth of Golden (cats) and jaguarundis http://www.lioc.org/AboutUs/History.html
Extractions: The History of LIOC - Back in the 1950's, ocelots and margays were commonly sold in retail pet stores. People who knew nothing about the proper care and feeding of these non-domestic cousins to the domestic cat, sold them to others who were equally ignorant of their special dietary and environmental needs. This resulted in calcium deficiencies, intestinal blockages, unnecessary canine teeth removals, and worse. Something had to be done and Catherine Cisin, a caring lady from, NewYork, was the woman to do it. She formed the Long Island Ocelot Club, and designed it to be a clearing house of husbandry information. Early LIOC newsletters depict an era long past. Back then, most ocelots and margays were jungle caught, and legally imported into America as kittens. The majority were a by-product of the fur trade, and the mortality rate was 50%. If left when their mother's were killed for their pelts, all would have perished. Captive-breeding was in its infancy, a trial-and-error learning process. In the November 1959 LIOC Newsletter, Lillian Ward of California, shared the news of a pair of ocelots expecting the birth of their third litter in as many years. Her first litter a male ocelot was born December 1957 and twin ocelots were born in November 1958.
LIOC-ESCF : Links be useful to individuals interested in wild felines. Serenity Springs A safe placefor big (cats). Preservation Trust Preserving certain endangered species that http://www.lioc.org/Links/Links.html
Extractions: Please Note : The LIOC-ESCF cannot guarantee the authenticity of documents on the Internet. Links to other web sites do not imply any endorsement of or responsibility for the opinions, ideas, data, or products presented at these locations, or guarantee the validity of the information provided. Links to other web sites are provided solely as a pointers to information that may be useful to individuals interested in wild felines.
EcoISP.com Switch Now And Save The Earth While You Surf! The loss of cougars and other felines in the eastern United States of private landownersis essential to successful conservation of endangered (cats), the NWF http://www.ecoisp.com/species10.asp
Extractions: WASHINGTON, DC, March 8, 2002 (ENS) - The Florida panther has been listed as endangered since 1967. Once at home from eastern Texas and the lower Mississippi River Valley through the southeastern states, there are now only about 6O adult panthers in the wild anywhere in the United States, all hidden in undeveloped patches of Florida. Ocelots once prowled the dense, chaparral thickets of south and east Texas and the Gulf Coast. The ocelot has been listed as endangered in the United States since 1972 and is also endangered in Mexico. Its historic range took in Arizona and Texas, south to Central and South America. Today ocelots are found in a few small areas in South Texas, and they are extirpated from Arizona.
CAT-TITUDES -- Meet The World's Wild Cats! JAGUAR Status endangered. NY 2) Some information included in this website was foundin Clan of the Wild (cats) A Celebration of felines in Word http://home.att.net/~thethundercats/ko00005.html
Extractions: "Make endangered species a vivid presence in the lives of people. Make it clear that every endangered species has a name, has a million-year history, has a place in the world. Bring us face to face with each one of those species. Make us know that they are our companions in the biosphere . . ." - Edward O. Wilson, Naturalist Now meet all of the major Species of the Felid Family. . . When you see the Lynx, you can click it to learn more. THE AFRICAN GOLDEN CAT
Big And Wild Cats, Help Save Their Lives! dedicated to the conservation of the endangered Snow Leopard and biological infurmationon Lions and other Big (cats). world is now the most threatened cat in http://felineforest.bravepages.com/wild.html