Home Lake St Lucia Leopard in St Lucia
 

Featured Venues: Book direct and save commision charges!

Agent Menu

Polls

Beach 4x4 ban: Do you feel beach access for 4x4 vehicles should be allowed in certain demarkated areas?
 

Login Form



User Menu

Search Property


Advanced Search

Sponsored Links

Wednesday, 09 December 2009 09:24

Leopard in St Lucia Featured

Written by  Administrator
Rate this item
(1 Vote)
The Leopard The Leopard www.lakestlucia.com

Have you been fortunate to enough to catch a glimpse of this elusive predator roaming our streets and trails? Email me some photos and I will publish them (with full credits)...

 

The most secretive and elusive of the large carnivores, the leopard is also the shrewdest. Pound for pound, it is the strongest climber of the larger cats and is capable of killing prey far larger than itself.
The coloring of the leopard varies from white to bright golden brown, spotted with black spots and rosettes. The rosettes consist of groups of 5 to 6 spots arranged in a tight ring.
The tail is longer than half the body length measured from head to tail. This fierce animal has small round ears and long whiskers growing from dark spots on the upper lip. The size of the leopard varies considerably. The leopard differs from the cheetah in having shorter legs, and rosette-like spots and is without the cheetah’s black "tear" marks from eye to mouth.
QUICK FACTS
Name: Panthera Pardus
Size: The leopard ranges in size from 1 to almost 2 metres long, and weighs between 30 - 70 kg. Females are typically around two-thirds the size of males.
Diet: Carnivorous; Small animals and medium size antelope.
Habitat: Bush and riverine forests. Usually in or near thickets on mountain sides or along streams and rivers. Leopards are mainly nocturnal animals but are also seen during the day, especially in the early mornings and late afternoons. They usually forage alone except in the mating season.
The Leopard
Leopards are shy, cunning and very dangerous, especially when wounded. Leopards are very good tree climbers and can pull large prey up a tree to protect it from other predators or scavengers in the vicinity. They return later to feed again. Leopards still occur outside conservation areas.
Socialisation: Leopards are basically solitary and go out of their way to avoid one another. Each animal has a home range that overlaps with its neighbors; the male's range is much larger and generally overlaps with those of several females. A leopard usually does not tolerate intrusion into its own range except to mate. Unexpected encounters between leopards can lead to fights.
Reproduction: Leopard breed throughout the year.
Gestation: The gestation period is 3 months. Number of young is 2 to 3 although more have been recorded.
Life Expectancy: 20 years.
Predators: Humans.
The most secretive and elusive of the large carnivores, the leopard is also the shrewdest. Pound for pound, it is the strongest climber of the larger cats and is capable of killing prey far larger than itself. 
The coloring of the leopard varies from white to bright golden brown, spotted with black spots and rosettes. The rosettes consist of groups of 5 to 6 spots arranged in a tight ring. 
The tail is longer than half the body length measured from head to tail. This fierce animal has small round ears and long whiskers growing from dark spots on the upper lip. The size of the leopard varies considerably. The leopard differs from the cheetah in having shorter legs, and rosette-like spots and is without the cheetah’s black "tear" marks from eye to mouth. 

QUICK FACTS

Name: Panthera Pardus

Size: The leopard ranges in size from 1 to almost 2 metres long, and weighs between 30 - 70 kg.

Females are typically around two-thirds the size of males.
Diet: Carnivorous; Small animals and medium size antelope.

Habitat: Bush and riverine forests. Usually in or near thickets on mountain sides or along streams and rivers.

Leopards are mainly nocturnal animals but are also seen during the day, especially in the early mornings and late afternoons.

They usually forage alone except in the mating season. 

Leopards are shy, cunning and very dangerous, especially when wounded. Leopards are very good tree climbers and can pull large prey up a tree to protect it from other predators or scavengers in the vicinity. They return later to feed again. Leopards still occur outside conservation areas. 

Socialisation: Leopards are basically solitary and go out of their way to avoid one another. Each animal has a home range that overlaps with its neighbors; the male's range is much larger and generally overlaps with those of several females. A leopard usually does not tolerate intrusion into its own range except to mate. Unexpected encounters between leopards can lead to fights. 
Reproduction: Leopard breed throughout the year.Gestation: The gestation period is 3 months. Number of young is 2 to 3 although more have been recorded. 


Life Expectancy: 20 years. 

Predators: Humans. 

 

 

Last modified on Wednesday, 09 December 2009 09:45
Administrator

Administrator

E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter the (*) required information where indicated.
Basic HTML code is allowed.

Counters


Impressions today:649
Impressions yesterday:5900
Impressions this month:8381
Impressions total:396874

Latest Venues: Book direct and save commision charges!

Joomla Templates by Joomlashack