Difference between revisions of "Cougar"

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Like the grand majority of cats, Cougars are solitary. Only mothers and their kittens live in a group. Males travel and hunt alone, and only meet other individuals during mating season. Males are very territorial. If juveniles fail to leave their maternal hunting grounds on time, conflicts can emerge between the juvenile and his father.
 
Like the grand majority of cats, Cougars are solitary. Only mothers and their kittens live in a group. Males travel and hunt alone, and only meet other individuals during mating season. Males are very territorial. If juveniles fail to leave their maternal hunting grounds on time, conflicts can emerge between the juvenile and his father.
 
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[[Category:Needs RL Info]] [[Category:Needs Appearance]] [[Category:Felid Friends]] [[Category:Feline Friends]]
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[[Category:Needs Appearance]] [[Category:Felid Friends]] [[Category:Feline Friends]]

Revision as of 18:11, 22 August 2017

Cougar

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Character Data
Also known as: Puma, Mountain Lion, Panther
Japanese Name: ピューマ
Romanised Name: Pyūma
First Featured in: Kemono Friends (2015 Game)
Animal Data
Scientific Name: Puma concolor
Distribution: The Americas
Diet: Carnivore
Average Lifespan in the Wild: 8–13 years
Read More: Cougar
Conservation Status: Status iucn3.1 LC.svg.png
Cougar Anime Season 2 Festival Pavilion​ (Gen 2)​ KF3 Nexon Game Gallery

{{{introduction}}}

Appearance

MILF: see Stacy's mom

Series Appearances

Appearances In Kemono Friends Media
Media Role

In Real Life

One of the large cats native to the American Continents, the cougar's habitats range from the Andes Mountains to the Yukon in Canada. The second largest cat, behind the Jaguar, it has become adapted to a wide range of environments, which have characteristics such as : dense brush, canyons, rim rocks, forested areas, mountainous deserts, and escarpments. Along with the Jaguar, the Cougar faced intense efforts by humans to extirpate it from it's habitats, resulting in most Cougar populations in Eastern North American destroyed, with various small pockets surviving (Florida). Populations continue to survive in many Western American states, the Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta, and the Yukon. In California, rapid human development and growth of infrastructure continues to place even more pressure on increasingly isolated Cougar populations.

The one-tone silver grey fur coat

The fourth largest cat, Cougars can reach up to 8 feet from nose to tail-tip in males, and 6.7 feet in females. Closer to the equator, the average size decreases, with the largest Cougars being found closer to the North and South poles. Compared to the other American Cat, the Jaguar, Cougars are on average smaller. Cougars are also physically unable to roar, as they lack the larynx system in the throat which the Panthera genus uses to emit roaring noises. Most cougars have one uniform fur color, which can be tawny, silver-grey, or reddish. Infants are born with spots and rings on their tails, but as they age, the spots gradually fade. With one of the largest hind leg to body proportions in the Felidae genus, the Cougar has an amazing jumping ability, and has a top running speed of 80 kmph. It's strong legs also enable it to climb vertically or at an angle, which allows it to evade its competitors or predators.

The Cougar has a wide range of its diet; prey include : bighorn, sheep, caribou, mountain goat, coyote, pronghorn, mule deer, and elk. In some cases, the Cougar is also known to prey on domesticated livestock. Smaller prey include : porcupines, beavers, hares, raccoons, wild turkey, and peccary. In general, the Cougar does not scavenge kills from other animals, and prefers to consume food it has killed itself. However, in some circumstances, Cougars have been noted to scavenge deer carcasses.

Like the grand majority of cats, Cougars are solitary. Only mothers and their kittens live in a group. Males travel and hunt alone, and only meet other individuals during mating season. Males are very territorial. If juveniles fail to leave their maternal hunting grounds on time, conflicts can emerge between the juvenile and his father.