Leopardus tigrinus (Schreber, 1775)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1038/s41598-024-52379-8 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10609065 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039987F3-FFF0-4641-FE22-FA0FFC8BDAFD |
treatment provided by |
Tatiana |
scientific name |
Leopardus tigrinus (Schreber, 1775) |
status |
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Leopardus tigrinus (Schreber, 1775) View in CoL 34:
The savanna tiger-cat is a 2.34 kg felid with a slender long-legged body and long margay-sized thin tail, with proportionally large ears, and a yellowish or gray-yellowish background color with either small open or solid large dot-like rosettes that may coalesce, with two pairs of mammae/teats ( Fig. 8a View Figure 8 ).
The savanna tiger-cat range comprises varying vanishing savanna and dry scrub woodland formations in Brazil and the Guiana Shield, which means that they mostly live in lowland non-forested habitats with low tree cover (typically <50%), with a median canopy height of 3 m that nevertheless has dense undergrowth, and that are mostly found in less productive soils, in areas of dry weather (<1000 mm rainfall/year) with hot temperatures, and in tropical dry/semi-arid climates, typically where the dominant mesopredator/intraguild killer (ocelot) is absent or low in number. Intraguild interactions appear to play a role and to have evolutionarily limited the species multidimensional space.
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