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Subject Item
n2:
rdf:type
n15: n37:
rdfs:label
Pampas Cat
rdfs:comment
The Pampas cat (Leopardus pajeros) is a small cat native to Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador,[1] and possibly far southwestern Colombia.[2] It is named after the pampas, but occurs in grassland, shrubland, and dry forest at elevations up to 5,000 m (16,000 ft).[3]
owl:sameAs
dbr:Pampas_cat
n34:
n35:
dcterms:subject
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n32:
NT
n12:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n13: n16:
n17:wikiPageUsesTemplate
n18: n19: n25: n33: n38:
n30:
Near Threatened
n3:
Animalia
n9:
Leopardus pajeros
n28:
250
n23:
Near threatened
n22:
L. pajeros
n40:
Leopardus
n29:
Mammalia
n11:
Felidae
n10:
Carnivora
n5:
n6:
n39:
Chordata
n4:
South America
n27:abstract
The Pampas cat (Leopardus pajeros) is a small cat native to Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador,[1] and possibly far southwestern Colombia.[2] It is named after the pampas, but occurs in grassland, shrubland, and dry forest at elevations up to 5,000 m (16,000 ft).[3] It has traditionally been included in the colocolo (L. colocolo), but was split primarily based on differences in pelage colour/pattern and cranial measurements.[3] The split is not supported by genetic work,[4][5] leading some authorities to maintain it as a subspecies of the colocolo.[2][6] Confusingly, when the colocolo includes the Pampas cat and Pantanal cat as subspecies, the "combined" species is sometimes referred to as the Pampas cat.[7] The Pampas cat is currently classified as "Near Threatened" in the IUCN Red List as habitat conversion and destruction may cause the population to decline in the future.[2] Pampas cats have not been studied much in the wild and little is known about their hunting habits. There have been reports of the cat hunting rodents and birds at night, and also hunting domestic poultry near farms.