By African standards, Kenya’s Amboseli itself is small, but it is part of two or more large scale systems that extend far beyond its boundaries. One is the Serengeti Ecosystem, which extends far to the south in Tanzania. The other is the Nilotic (mainly Maasai) Pastoralist cattle keeping culture. It is being reported that lions in Amboseli are in crisis because of conflict between these two systems.From a National Geographic Society press release: Continue reading Amboseli Lions May Go Extinct
Tag Archives: Cat
Friday Cat Blogging
Well, in celbration of getting the cats back for a month or so this summer:
An Engineer’s Guide to Cats
[hat tip]OK we have room for one engineer joke: Continue reading An Engineer’s Guide to Cats
LOL Kats: The Movie!
With a musical score especially made for Saint Patrick’s Day!
New Intelligence Score
Our Cats are Going Away!
For the last several months, we’ve been cat sitting for our friends Gil and Gilliane. They are very good cats, and Amanda especially has bonded to them. Well, Gil and Gilliane are returning from their extended stay overseas, and want their cats back. There will be a certain emptiness when they are gone.But even worse, we’re gonna die of heart attacks!!!! …. Continue reading Our Cats are Going Away!
Very Large Parks are the Wave of the Future
Across Africa, and to some extent Asia, existing large parks and preserves are being combined into very large parks in order to serve several important functions. One is to make the parks so large that there will be interior areas that are impractical for most poaching or other encroachment. Another is to allow movement of migratory animals into new areas when their populations grow (presumably with some degree of natural culling cycling the process down now and then). Another is to allow a park to always contain a minimal range of a certain habitat even when secular or long term climate variation reduces that habitat. Yet another may be to make the park more attractive to tourism.With animals like tigers, who have relatively low population densities, it is essential to have large contiguous areas in order to have a viable population size both for genetic diversity and to get past periods of decimation by periodic disease or starvation episodes. Continue reading Very Large Parks are the Wave of the Future
The Physics of Tatiana
Tatiana was the captive Siberian Tiger who, on Christmas Day, leaped out of her cave to attack teenage boys who were taunting her. She killed one of them. Zookeepers are investigating how she did it, considering the possibility that the wall of her enclosure was not high enough (technically, it was lower than recommended height by a short distance). Tatiana’s leap has, indeed, has rekindled a long term dialog regarding zoos, and big cats in zoos in particular.Now, a physicist at Northeastern University in Boston, has produced an analysis indicating that what did happen was possible. However, I think there is a problem with the analysis. Continue reading The Physics of Tatiana
Tatiana Update
Tatiana was the tiger that leaped from its enclosure in the San Francisco Zoo, killing one and wounding others.Details of the investigation have been released, and apparently, the tiger was taunted. Continue reading Tatiana Update
“Not everyone can do what we do..”
I’m talking about herdin’ cats, bro Continue reading “Not everyone can do what we do..”
It’s Friday, so Here’s a Cat Video
Translation below the fold… Continue reading It’s Friday, so Here’s a Cat Video
Good Morning. Feed me.
This is exactly what happens in our house every morning, except that there are two of them:
[hat tip: Tangled Up in Blue Guy]Also in Tangled Up, this important post on No Beer in America.
The Gaping Maw
This is a web site dedicated entirely to the collection of photographs of animals with gaping maws. Worth a look. But not too closely.
Wednesday Cat Blogging: King Cheetah
I took this photo of a cheetah at De Wildt’s in South Africa. It is a “King Cheetah.” Although there was a period of time when some thought the King was a new subspecies of cheetah, it turns out to be a simple color morph. Although this was taken with a zoom lens, it was not set on telephoto … In fact, I had to wipe the breath of the cat off the lens … (And I’m only slightly exaggerating).