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Bobcat

The bobcat (Lynx rufus), also known as the red lynx, is one of the four extant species within the medium-sized wild cat genus Lynx. Native to North America, it ranges from southern Canada through most of the contiguous United States to Oaxaca in Mexico. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List since 2002, due to its wide distribution and large population. Although it has been hunted extensively both for sport and fur, populations have proven stable, though declining in some areas.[1]

For other uses, see Bobcat (disambiguation).

It has distinctive black bars on its forelegs and a black-tipped, stubby (or "bobbed") tail, from which it derives its name. It reaches a total length (including the tail) of up to 125 cm (50 in). It is an adaptable predator inhabiting wooded areas, semidesert, urban edge, forest edge, and swampland environments. It remains in some of its original range, but populations are vulnerable to extirpation by coyotes and domestic animals. Though the bobcat prefers rabbits and hares, it hunts insects, chickens, geese and other birds, small rodents, and deer. Prey selection depends on location and habitat, season, and abundance. Like most cats, the bobcat is territorial and largely solitary, although with some overlap in home ranges. It uses several methods to mark its territorial boundaries, including claw marks and deposits of urine or feces. The bobcat breeds from winter into spring and has a gestation period of about two months.


Two subspecies are recognized: one east of the Great Plains, and the other west of the Great Plains. It is featured in some stories of the indigenous peoples of North and Central America, and in the folklore of European-descended inhabitants of the Americas.

Lynx floridanus proposed by in 1817 was a greyish lynx with yellowish brown spots from Florida.[4]

Constantine Samuel Rafinesque

Lynx fasciatus also proposed by Rafinesque in 1817 was a reddish brown lynx with a thick fur from the northwest coast.

[4]

Lynx baileyi proposed by in 1890 was a female lynx that was shot in the San Francisco Mountains.[5]

Clinton Hart Merriam

Lynx texensis proposed by in 1895 to replace the earlier name Lynx rufus var. maculatus.[6]

Joel Asaph Allen

Lynx gigas proposed by in 1897 was a skin of an adult male lynx shot near Bear River, Nova Scotia.[7]

Outram Bangs

Lynx rufus eremicus and Lynx rufus californicus proposed by in 1898 were skins and skulls of two adult lynxes killed in San Diego County, California.[8]

Edgar Alexander Mearns

Lynx rufus peninsularis proposed by in 1898 was a skull and a pale rufous skin of a male lynx from Baja California Peninsula.[9]

Oldfield Thomas

Lynx fasciatus pallescens proposed by Merriam in 1899, was a skin of a gray lynx that was killed near .[10]

Trout Lake, Washington

Lynx ruffus escuinapae proposed by Allen in 1903 was a skull and a pale rufous skin of an adult female from in Mexico.[11]

Escuinapa Municipality

Lynx rufus superiorensis by Randolph Lee Peterson and Stuart C. Downing in 1952 was a skeleton and skin of a male lynx killed near .[12]

Port Arthur, Ontario

Lynx rufus oaxacensis proposed by George Goodwin in 1963 was based on three skulls and six skins of lynxes killed in the Mexican .[13]

Tehuantepec District

Bougar

Canada lynx

Eurasian lynx

Iberian lynx

. IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group.

"Bobcat"

. National Geographic. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007.

"Bobcats"

Skahill, P. (2019). . Connecticut Public Radio / WNPR.

"What are the secrets of Connecticut's Bobcats?"