ENVR In virus lockdown, Europe's predators regain turf (AFP)

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

In virus lockdown, Europe's predators regain turf
Issued on: 16/06/2020 - 06:18 Modified: 16/06/2020 - 06:18
Handout photo from Rewilding Europe shows an Eurasian grey wolf (Canis lupus) walking at a vulture watching site in the Madzharovo valley, Bulgaria

Handout photo from Rewilding Europe shows an Eurasian grey wolf (Canis lupus) walking at a vulture watching site in the Madzharovo valley, Bulgaria Staffan WIDSTRAND REWILDING EUROPE/AFP/File

Paris (AFP)
The hunter-prey drama took place just outside wildlife enthusiast Ennio Ciccotti's window, in the central Italian town of Scanno.

Four wolves, trailing a herd of red deer, chased them down the road bordering Ciccotti's house, and ran through town, passing across front lawns and shuttered restaurant terraces.

Eventually, the pack snagged one of the deer as it attempted to jump over a high fence.

There was no need to drag it away, the feasting took place on the spot.

Camera traps had captured images of wolves hunting in suburban forests and fields outside Scanno, but seeing them stalk prey in the centre of town was new, said Ciccotti, a volunteer at the wildlife advocacy organisation Salviamo l'Orso.

During Italy's COVID-19 lockdown, which began on March 9, Ciccotti logged at least three instances of wolves hunting deer within the town's confines.

"They just want to eat, so if they are not disturbed by cars, by people, by other human behaviour, they just do what they have to do," he said by phone.

Stories like this have popped up in many locations in recent months.

Across Europe and around the world, stay-at-home orders since early March have allowed some animals to recolonise -- or at least revisit -- urbanised spaces, in which their kind once roamed free.

South Africa's Kruger National Park posted videos on its social media accounts showing lions and hyenas lounging on a golf course in the park's Skukuza Rest Camp.

A wolverine was photographed on an empty beach in Washington State dining on marine animal leftovers, local media reported.

And in Paris, a family of foxes took up residence in Pere Lachaise cemetery -- where Oscar Wilde, Jim Morrison and Edith Piaf, among others, are buried.

Observed by caretakers, the foxes moved in just before France's confinement period began but clearly took advantage of the temporary ban on two-legged creatures, according to Amandine Sanvisens, president of Paris Animaux Zoopolis.

"They lived there two months without seeing a single person," she said, adding that the cemetery's reopening to visitors would likely lead the animals to resume nocturnal behaviour.

While anecdotes abound, biologists are still unsure, however, whether human confinement has significantly altered animal behaviour and believe it could take months, or even years, to find out.

- 'Ecology of fear' -
"Movement ecologists are definitely talking about this right now," said Sarah Davidson, a data curator at Movebank, an animal tracking database run by the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour in southern Germany.

"So far we are seeing lots of stories and photos," she noted by email.

"That might be something really exciting, or just the result of people spending more time gazing out the window -- or on Photoshop."

While the return-of-nature narrative may be overblown, there are scientific explanations for why people are spotting more wild animals in urban settings.

For large predators in particular, human confinement has probably been a blessing, according to Liana Zanette, a researcher at Western University in Ontario.

Zanette looks at the impacts of fear on animal behaviour and how the predator-prey relationship influences entire ecosystems, which biologists call the ecology of fear.

Her recent research has shown that, while all animals shun humans, none do so more than large carnivores, such as wolves, cougars and bears.

"Just having us out there on the landscape scares these animals," she said.

In a number of studies, when researchers played recordings of human voices, large predators were more likely to go into hiding than the smaller mammals they hunt.

"The prey animals may not like us, but we give them lots of food and help keep the large carnivore predators away," she said.

"So when we're off the landscape, and the large carnivore predators come back, the prey completely change their behaviour."

Prey will sometimes use the presence of humans as "shields," according to Antonio Di Croce, director of Italy's Monte Genzana wildlife reserve.

But with homo sapiens temporarily confined indoors, other predators feel emboldened to hunt in areas they didn't dare enter before and which prey animals once considered safe, he said.

- Animal-tracking data -
As human settlements, agriculture and industry encroach deeper into wild habitats, wolves and other predators appear to be adapting to semi-urban environments.

Whether these changes are more perceived than real is a matter of discussion among scientists.

"As time goes by, we will be able to develop a fuller picture of whether we are really seeing big changes in animal behaviour, or whether we are just watching a bit more closely while we are stuck at home wondering what's happening outside," said Sam Williams, a South Africa-based expert on carnivores and a research fellow at Britain's Durham University.

He noted that the COVID confinement has affected different animals in different ways.

While some predators have taken advantage to hunt prey in new areas, others have been on the receiving end of predation due to a rise in poaching.

Some argue that once confinement ends, things will quickly return to the status quo ante.

"Wildlife are very smart," Di Croce said. "When people are coming out again, species that are much more shy are going to go away again."
However, without data, even the most plausible explanations remain speculation, experts caution.

To address that problem, researchers at the International Bio-Logging Society at Scotland's University of St Andrews have collected animal-borne sensor data from more than 60 countries.

"I think that this is going to stretch over a couple of years because we'll probably see people going in and out of confinement," Davidson, at Movebank, said.

- Slow or quick rebound? -
The lifting of "strict" confinement periods across Europe may force predators and other large mammals back into hiding.
But conservationists are optimistic that even a brief glimpse of wildlife in our midst will spark interest in how best to conserve it in a warming world.

European nations are currently debating the EU's 2030 Biodiversity Strategy.

"I think that during the confinement, humans realised that they need nature," said Pierre Dubreuil, head of the French Office of Biodiversity.
"Now, the next step is to understand how we are going to cohabitate with it."

In some ways, the confinement highlights trends already under way across Europe, according to Frans Schepers, the cofounder of Rewilding Europe, which pushes for the reintroduction of wild animals.

Large carnivores were once ubiquitous in Europe but had nearly disappeared by the end of World War II, he said.

But thanks to concerted conservation efforts, Europe's four major large predators -- brown bears, lynx, wolverines and grey wolves -- have all seen a resurgence.

This is true even in unprotected zones, according to a study led by Swedish researcher Guillaume Chapron, who counts more than 17,000 bears and 12,000 wolves across the continent.

The resurgence of large predators in Europe and elsewhere will have a positive impact on biodiversity, rippling down the food chain, Zanette noted.

"It shows you the incredible resilience of nature -- it just bounces back if we allow it to," Schepers said.
© 2020 AFP
 

jward

passin' thru
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Melodi

Disaster Cat
Notice how the handler walks in the back of the kitty, I've heard that is important when working with semi-tamed but large wild cats; they accept attention from humans from the back but they can get aggressive if they see people coming at them, sometimes even people they love - they also don't know there own strength and can hurt a human even if they are bonded to their handler or trainer.

On the other hand, being able to walk around and interact with people even in this way is good for the cats, they actually sleep a lot and get easily bored, this poor kitty is so large (and a limited edition) there would be no living prey that I could think of (unless we bring back the mammoths in giant herds) big enough to sustain it so these will always be in captivity unless or until such giant revived mega-fauna preserves are set up and established.

As for wildlife, that is coming into human cities and towns everywhere; my favorite so far was a picture of a coyote on the Golden Gate Bridge with a Road Runner in its mouth.

4d4ad2cd-8153-474b-acf3-e62b31537de5.jpg
 

jward

passin' thru
Conversely, this Magnificent Beast, the Galapagos Giant Turtle, has not only thrived under, but required, man's presence to thwart extinction threats... After many years doing his bit for continuity, he's being returned to his home in the wild





Reuters
@Reuters

26m

Diego, a Galapagos giant tortoise who helped save his species by fathering some 800 offspring, was released into the wild along with other tortoises https://reut.rs/30PmgDW
View: https://twitter.com/Reuters/status/1273226385042083840?s=20
 

jward

passin' thru
More turf confusion, this time this side of the pond.

San Francisco Police
@SFPD

1h

Warning sign

Mountain Lion Spotted

Mountain Lion last spotted in the East Cut Neighborhood of #SF. If seen stay away, back up slowly facing the lion, and do not run. Call
@SFACC
at 415-554-9400. For after hours assistance please call 911.



It is likely the mountain lion is confused and lost, and will soon find its way south and out of the city. If approached by the mountain lion make yourself appear big and shout. Remain vigilant and use caution outdoors.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
Magnificent Beasts, indeed

This species, the Liger, has grown enormous, and has even captured its own humanoid back massager.
Please note that this is a "sister" not a "brother"
Islamicat
Pouting cat face
@_Islamicat

19h

Brother Ishtiak is ABSOLUTE FURKING UNIT. He have to travel with own personal white massage slave at all times
View: https://twitter.com/_Islamicat/status/1272542738609774592?s=20

That is a huge predator.

Texican....
 

jward

passin' thru
Today's magnificent beast is a bird not known for flight, but his amazing plumage, endowed him to lure love to his side.
..Unfortunately, his strident vocals do anything but. This story has the distinction of actually being thread appropriate, so I took the liberty of reducing my "thread drift" sentence by a week, and paying for some new movies & pillows for my special house from petty cash.
Not sure how far Oakland is from Berkeley, but they may wish to hold on to the bird if planning to forego their policing force too: Peacocks are fairly good watchdogs.


He has screamed relentlessly’: Feral peacock divides Oakland neighborhood
How a colorful new bird neighbor incited a Nextdoor battle for the ages.
By Madeline Wells, SFGATE
Updated 9:33 am PDT, Wednesday, July 15, 2020




In a North Oakland neighborhood, a rather noisy peacock recently took up residence in someone's yard. Neighborhood drama ensued. Photo: Kai Chang

Photo: Kai Chang




In a North Oakland neighborhood, a rather noisy peacock recently took up residence in someone's yard. Neighborhood drama ensued.

Down a short cul-de-sac in North Oakland, an unusual blue-and-green-feathered neighbor has recently moved into someone’s yard. His name is Bruce… or Paco, or Peter, or Pierre, or Abraham.

Apparently, it’s difficult to settle on a name for the neighborhood peacock.

Most neighbors are fans of the peacock on Occidental Street, saying the sight of him brings joy to the monotony of life during quarantine. But for a few, his presence is hell on earth — and they’ve taken to Nextdoor to voice their complaints.

“For the past 15 weeks or so he has screamed relentlessly, every day,” wrote neighbor Jesse T. “...It’s so loud inside my house it literally feels like he is inside my house. It got so bad that two months ago, I had to move out of my street-facing bedroom and into my middle bedroom/storage room. I have been sleeping on the floor on a camping air mattress ever since [...] I STILL get woken up at 4, 5, 6am many mornings.”

According to The E’ville Eye, The City of Oakland received a noise complaint about the peacock and sent an Animal Control Officer to the block to investigate. No action was taken to relocate the bird. He is believed to be feral and rumored by neighbors to be the same peacock that lived at a nearby location for four years prior until the resident who fed him moved.

The Occidental Street peacock is not the first critter to get bold during quarantine. In Oakland’s Grand Lake neighborhood, a wild turkey named Gerald has been chasing terrorized visitors at the Morcom Rose Garden. In San Francisco, coyotes have been capitalizing on the empty streets, frolicking in yards and even scaling rooftops.


Luckily for me, the latest unusual animal to pop up in an urban Bay Area neighborhood was located just a five-minute bike ride from my apartment. The glamorous bird wasn’t difficult to find. I heard none of his infamous screeching, but a message board of neighborhood commentary tacked to a large wooden gate pointed me in the right direction.

While many neighbors have voiced their love for the peacock, others have been tormented by his presence, even filing a noise complaint to the City of Oakland. Photo: Lana Q.

Photo: Lana Q.




While many neighbors have voiced their love for the peacock, others have been tormented by his presence, even filing a noise complaint to the City of Oakland.

“Dear neighbors: A complaint has been lodged about the peacock,” read one notice. Messages of peacock support also decorated the entrance to his habitat, from a haiku to a child’s drawing of his likeness. Another pro-peacock flyer listed “things worth City of Oakland’s time and tax dollars in 2020” (hint: while “expanding access to testing and treatment of COVID-19” and “promot[ing] justice and racial equality” were listed, peacock removal was not).

The peacock himself, whom I spotted hanging out with some neighborhood squirrels and quietly pecking the ground, had nothing to say.



Regardless of his early morning squawking habit, it’s obvious the peacock has amassed quite a fan club. Lana Q., a neighbor who lives on the same block as the controversial bird, urged people on Nextdoor to contact the city to voice their support for the peacock.

RELATED: How are the Pier 39 sea lions doing? We took a drone to find out

“It is nice to have a voice of nature to counterbalance the cars and fireworks,” she wrote on Nextdoor. “We have also been enjoying seeing the families with strollers and kids passing by on the way to see Peter.”

Another of the bird’s admirers is Amanda Nummi, a neighbor who says the peacock adds beauty and hope to her daily routine in a time of difficulty.

“I visit the peacock several times a week with my toddler, and he loves him so much. He hears him crowing in the morning and it brings us both giggles and smiles,” said Nummi in an email. “I visit the peacock sleeping after my early-morning runs, he’s always in the same trunk high up in his tree, and I know he’s a stable symbol in my life that things are still normal for some.”

A message board of peacock commentary decorates the fence facing the peacock's habitat in one neighbor's spacious backyard. Photo: Madeline Wells/SFGATE

Photo: Madeline Wells/SFGATE




A message board of peacock commentary decorates the fence facing the peacock's habitat in one neighbor's spacious backyard.

Peafowl are not native to California, nor the United States at all. They originated in the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, although people bringing them over as pets has led to a few wild peacock populations popping up in America, namely in Southern California.

While many neighbors are happy to have him here, others loathe him to the extent of joking about having a “Peacock BBQ.” So are the streets of Oakland really the best home for this wayward bird? I sought a peacock expert (yes, they exist) to find out.

When I stumbled upon a photo online of a man wearing a hat that read “Mr. Peacock” while clutching a peacock in his arms, I knew I’d found the right guy. Dennis Fett has been raising peacocks for over 39 years and runs the Peacock Information Center in Minden, Iowa with his wife Debra J. Buck. Unlike the rest of us peacock novices, he was not surprised to hear about Bruce/Peter/Abraham’s sudden appearance.

“Your problem is a typical one that we hear from all over the world,” Fett said. “I haven't heard of any problems in your neck of the woods recently but that doesn't mean there aren’t any.”

While 4 a.m. piercing bird honks can be disturbing to sleeping neighbors, Fett said the bird isn’t doing it just to hear his own voice — it’s because something is amiss.

“They should count their blessings that the peacock is making noise at night because that means somebody, animal or human, is doing something that's not in the normal sense of the environment,” explained Fett. “They’re like a watchdog — they have keen hearing. He’s not haphazardly making that sound, because normally they sleep and mind their own business.”

Some neighbors have left peacock-themed poetry and artwork on the fence overlooking the bird's habitat. Photo: Madeline Wells/SFGATE

Photo: Madeline Wells/SFGATE




Some neighbors have left peacock-themed poetry and artwork on the fence overlooking the bird's habitat.

It could be anything from a raccoon rummaging through garbage cans to a human slamming a car door early in the morning that’s scaring the peacock, according to Fett. One neighbor hypothesized that the recent excess of fireworks could be instigating his chatter.

Regardless, there’s one thing Fett feels certain about.

“The bird doesn’t really belong there,” he said. “I love the peafowl, but he needs to be back to a place where he’s safe.”

In Fett’s experience, animal control is unlikely to take any action regarding the peacock (as long as it’s not causing a hazard) because it’s not part of their officers’ normal training. He says it’s up to the neighbors to hire a poultry expert to capture and relocate the bird to a more rural area where it will be safer — assuming no previous owner steps forward to claim it.

RELATED: Bird plucks an alarmed shark from the ocean, takes it for a ride

“I apologize to the people who want to see the bird, because I think it gives them some joy, especially now during the virus,” said Fett. “But we have to be careful because we don’t want someone to have a wreck with their car. I would rather the bird be removed.”

This news will surely disappoint the bird’s legion of avid supporters, but to those who plead for sympathy on Nextdoor (“this peacock is pushing me over the edge” wrote Jesse T.), it may finally mean a peaceful night of sleep for the first time in months.

Madeline Wells is an SFGATE reporter. Email: madeline.wells@sfgate.com | Twitter: @madwells22

posted for fair use
 

jward

passin' thru
oh my. This story is actually on point, too. I think there is a moral to this story that doesn't involve encroaching upon animals habitats. :jstr:

..sigh..really makes me think of the la magnifique bête originale too.. :whistle::hmm:



Cheeky boar leaves nudist grunting in laptop chase
1596816326934.png
  • 3 hours ago




Image copyright Adele landauer
A nudist in Berlin got too close to nature for comfort when a wild boar snatched his plastic bag - which had his laptop inside.
The naked man gave chase to the boar and her two piglets - much to the amusement of fellow sunbathers.
Adele Landauer, an actor and life coach, took photos of the chase at Teufelssee - a popular bathing spot - and put them on Facebook.
"Nature strikes back!" she wrote, adding that the man laughed it all off.
"He gave it his all", with not a stitch on, she reported. "I then showed the photos to the man, he laughed soundly and authorised me to make them public."

'He was very focused'
Ms Landauer provided more details on her Instagram page, saying the incident was a good example of someone persevering to achieve their goal.
She said there were many nude sunbathers at the spot when the wild boars appeared.
While the man was bathing, she writes, the boars calmly ate a pizza from his backpack and then "they were looking for a dessert".
"They found this yellow bag and decided to take it away. But the man who owned it realized it was the bag with his laptop.
"So, he was very focused and run [sic] behind the boars in order to get it back."
The onlookers "adored him how focused he stayed and when he came back with his yellow bag in the hand we all clapped and congratulated him for his success".
There is a strong tradition of naturism in Germany, where in summer it is quite normal for people to strip off in parks. The back-to-nature movement is known as Freikörperkultur - "free body culture" - or FKK for short.
Wednesday's incident comes just days after a particularly bold urban fox in Berlin was found to have walked off with dozens of people's shoes, which they had unwisely left in their gardens.
In the coronavirus lockdown there were many reports of animals becoming more daring, taking advantage of empty public spaces. Wild boar have already made themselves at home in some Berlin suburbs.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I remember the peacocks of Berkeley, they keep thinking they have gotten all of them moved out of Oakland and Berkeley CA and they keep coming BACK... (since the 1930s..)

Wild Boar at the nudist camp, good thing I wasn't planning to go anywhere this year, the ferrets of Harbon Hotsprings were enough for me (sadly probably gone now, the cats were all missing after the fire too).
 

jward

passin' thru
Today happens to be WORLD OLIPHANT DAY
:: clasps hands n smiles in delight because I absolutely ADORE me some oliphants::
:: sets out the pachyderm shaped cheeseballs, crackers & cupcakes for our celebratory feast::


Al Jazeera English
@AJEnglish

11m

On #WorldElephantDay, we look at how Sri Lanka's COVID-19 lockdown helped reduce elephant deaths by 40% https://aje.io/cwkjc
View: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish/status/1293560519371165701?s=20


The article is posted in it's entirety below:
Coronavirus gives Sri Lanka's threatened elephants a reprieve
Conservationists say country's lockdown has helped reduce the death toll from clashes between elephants and humans.

6 hours ago


World Elephant Day is celebrated every year on August 12 to spread awareness about the preservation and protection of elephants [Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP]

World Elephant Day is celebrated every year on August 12 to spread awareness about the preservation and protection of elephants [Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP]
more on Coronavirus pandemic

Sri Lanka's coronavirus lockdown has helped reduce the death toll from clashes between elephants and humans, conservationists have said.
Sumith Pilapitiya, a conservationist and former director-general of the government's wildlife department, estimated that the number of elephant deaths decreased by 40 percent during the coronavirus lockdown, which started in March and officially ended in June.
A record 405 elephants were killed by humans in the country last year, up from about 360 in 2018. A total of 121 people were killed by elephants, up from 96 the year before, according to government data.
Speaking ahead of World Elephant Day on Wednesday, Jayantha Jayewardene, a leading international expert on elephants, told AFP: "We can say that the human-elephant conflict eased during curfews.
"But this is a temporary situation. Farmers will start defending their crops and the killings will resume."
Most of the killed elephants are shot dead or poisoned by farmers trying to keep them off their land. The animals are considered sacred on the majority-Buddhist island and are protected, but prosecutions are rare.
Most of the humans are killed by elephants who have seen their habitat drastically reduced, rampaging in villages looking for food.

 

pauldingbabe

The Great Cat

pauldingbabe

The Great Cat
Or he could be pissed that the snake did in fact just eat his brother.....

You just never know in these situations.....
 

jward

passin' thru
These beasts, albeit less magnificent than many, have also reclaimed habitat at the center of man's once bustling city street-scapes. Here they've set up shop and conduct their business as they've done since the dawn of time.

Islamicat
@_Islamicat

3m
Islamirat is one of our most revered warriors. Not only is he laden with plagues for biological warfares, he is also utterly fearless
View: https://twitter.com/_Islamicat/status/1319598117348671488?s=20


 
Last edited:

von Koehler

Has No Life - Lives on TB
"Wild Super Cows Return to Europe"....
170109114719-two-young-tauros-cows-herperduin-netherlands-super-169.jpg

Goering had a similar project underway to recreate the aurochs by selective back breeding.

Polish lands were designated for these beasts, the humans forcibly removed to create his wildlife sanctuary. When the Russians conquered the area, all the "Hitler"
cattle were killed.
 

jward

passin' thru
Another magnificent beast made his way to the heart of the city, perhaps not hearing that the lockdowns had eased, and the two footers had reclaimed the territory for their own. This 100 lb handsome lad is now a guest at the oakland zoo, and will be re-released into the wild later today, pending a clean bill of health.

Wayward San Francisco mountain lion captured after being found in tree
Amy Graff

4 minutes


A mountain lion was captured in San Francisco on Wednesday night and is in the care of the Oakland Zoo.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife said data collected from the puma's radio collar revealed this is the same animal spotted roaming city streets in the past two days.
The mountain lion was found in a tree on Santa Marina and Mission streets on the west side of Bernal Heights, about two blocks from Holly Park, according to San Francisco Animal Care and Control.
A wayward mountain lion that was spotted in a tree on Santa Marina Street near Mission Street in San Francisco was captured May 19, 2021.

A wayward mountain lion that was spotted in a tree on Santa Marina Street near Mission Street in San Francisco was captured May 19, 2021.
Ken Shelf
Animal Care and Control was the first on the scene and posted an image of the animal in the tree on social media. Capt. Amy Corso coordinated with the San Francisco Police Department to establish a safe perimeter.

Fish and Wildlife officers arrived next and darted the animal in the hindquarters with a tranquilizer.

Mountain lion safely removed. @nbcbayarea pic.twitter.com/TmOXSQcmbk
— Jean Elle (@nbcjeanelle) May 20, 2021

KCBS reported the lion got woozy and fell asleep on the front porch of a nearby home before officers tagged and caged it.

San Francisco resident Ken Shelf was on a walk with his wife in the neighborhood when he noticed the Animal Care and Control van and police cars.

"We stopped and somewhat kiddingly asked them if they were out looking for the lion and they told us yes, it was currently in the tree," said Shelf, who snapped the photo of the puma in the tree that was shared by the agency on social media. "I felt frightened, but also somewhat giddy to have the worlds collide in this fashion, a beautiful beast like that, living in the wild, yet wandering the city at night, looking for something to do, and possibly a bite to eat — just like the rest of us."
A mountain lion was captured in San Francisco on May 19, 2021.

A mountain lion was captured in San Francisco on May 19, 2021.
Quinn Klaiman
"The sedated lion was taken to the Oakland Zoo for evaluation and will probably be released in a more suitable location later today," said Deb Campbell, a spokesperson for Animal Care and Control.

The Oakland Zoo added in a statement that the mountain lion is a large, healthy male of about 100 pounds. The animal was met by hospital staff at the Oakland Zoo Veterinary Hospital at about 1 a.m. Thursday.

A mountain lion has been seen in Bernal Heights and the Portola District in the past two days. Earlier this week, a resident in the Portola District captured footage of the animal with a home security camera.

Pumas in search of new habitat and hunting territory occasionally wander into San Francisco from San Mateo County. Over the years, there have been occasional sightings, usually around Lake Merced, but typically the animals quickly realize they don't want to be in the city and head back south.

Last June, a juvenile puma was captured in the SoMa neighborhood.

Fish and Wildlife estimates 4,000 to 6,000 mountain lions live in California.
 

jward

passin' thru
This herd of magnificent beasts heard rumors of cities in lockdown, prompting them to leave their nature preserves and migrate. Although they've been seen on more than one city street in Asia, they still, apparently, prefer the softer, sweeter country sides for their snuggling sessions, and who can blame them, eh.

At some point they acquired human trackers, who've moved some humans out of the migrating herds' path.

Asian oliphants are the largest land mammals on the continent.







CNN
@CNN

8h

Aerial footage shows a herd of elephants resting after they trekked 500 km (310 miles) north from a nature reserve in south China https://cnn.it/3uZkueV
View: https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1402367931665817604?s=20
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Magnificent Beasts, indeed

This species, the Liger, has grown enormous, and has even captured its own humanoid back massager.
Please note that this is a "sister" not a "brother"
Islamicat
Pouting cat face
@_Islamicat

19h

Brother Ishtiak is ABSOLUTE FURKING UNIT. He have to travel with own personal white massage slave at all times
View: https://twitter.com/_Islamicat/status/1272542738609774592?s=20
Ligars are bred by people, when they happen "naturally" it is almost always in old-fashioned circuses or zoos where lions and tigers were kept together. Today the Tiglons, Ligars, and their fertile offspring are intentionally bred by people.

Cats that big have existed in Earth's history and the genetics are there in the feline genome to produce them during times when prey really is that big (Mammoths, Mastodons, Giant Elk, Cave Bears, Wooly Rinos).

But when the megafauna died out at the end of the last Ice Age, the super big cats scaled back down again.

However, a "Big Cat" (that's a genetic thing, not always a size thing) can breed with any other "Big Cat" and any "Small Cat" can breed with any other "Small Cat" (Pumas are Small Cats by the way).

This allows nature to produce more super-sized or super-small cats in a hurry depending on the food and resource situation.

There is currently no natural habitat where cats that big can survive in nature, however; the Russians have already set aside a "Mammoth Park" in case their genetic programs manage to revive some of the Ice Age animals. There, such huge cats might be viable.
 
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