세상에서 가장 치명적인 고양이 VIDEO: Adorable, Remorseless Killing Machine Is World's Deadliest Cat


Adorable, Remorseless Killing Machine Is World's Deadliest Cat

By Mindy Weisberger, Senior Writer | November 1, 2018


The deadliest cat on Earth isn't a shaggy-maned lion, a sleek leopard or a stealthy tiger. It's a wee cat that you've probably never heard of: Africa's smallest feline, the black-footed cat.


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세상에서 가장 치명적인 고양이 


아프리카산 검은 발 고양이


 지구상에서 가장 치명적인 고양이는 털이 많은 사자, 매끈한 표범 또는 은밀한 호랑이가 아니다. 아프리카산 가장 작은 고양이인 검은 발 고양이다.


아프리카 남부의 초원지대에 서식하는 검은발 고양이는 끝없이 둥근 얼굴과 국내 고양이와 비교해도 작은 밝은 갈색의 검은 반점이 있는 몸을 가지고 있다. 이 야생 고양이 새끼는 길이가 14~20인치(최대 50cm)에 불과하고 키는 약 8인치(20cm)이고 무게는 약 2-6lbs(최대 2.7kg)입니다. 




국제 멸종 위기 고양이 협회에 따르면,


물론, 이러한 측정치는 세계에서 가장 무서운 포식 동물 중 하나인 상당히 큰 고양이와 비교하면 그다지 자극적으로 들리지 않는다. 하지만 PBS 네이처 미니시리즈 "슈퍼 캣츠"에 따르면, 이 검은 발 달린 고양이는 하룻밤에 표범이 6개월 만에 사냥하는 것보다 더 많은 먹이를 사냥하고 데려온다고 한다.


미니시리즈의 두 번째 에피소드는 지난 밤(10월 31일) PBS에서 방영되었다. 이 영화는 검은 발 고양이와 코스타리카의 임신한 재규어, 인도의 희귀한 늪지대의 호랑이 그리고 유일한 반고동 고양이과 같은 다른 매혹적이고 눈에 띄지 않는 야생 고양이들의 모습을 보여준다.


Terry Whittaker




진정한 킬러

이 작은 고양이들을 촬영하는 것은 이례적으로 어려운 일이었다고 보이스랜드는 말했다. 검은발 고양이는 너무 작기 때문에 큰 고양이들보다 키가 큰 풀밭을 따라 추적하기가 더 어렵다. "어린 고양이들이 주로 밤에 사냥을 하기 때문에, 제작진은 전에는 포착되지 않았던 사냥 행동의 장면을 녹화하기 위해 빛을 감지하는 특수 카메라를 사용해야 했다"고 보글랜드는 설명했다.


그리고 사냥에 관해서, 영화제작자들이 보았듯이, 검은발 고양이는 엄청나게 효율적이다. "진정한 강자"라고 세계적인 야생 고양이 보존 단체인 팬더라의 루크 헌터가 말하고 있다


황기철 콘페이퍼 에디터 큐레이터

Ki Cheol Hwang, conpaper editor, curator


edited by kcontents


Native to the grasslands of southern Africa, the black-footed cat has an endearingly round face and a light brown, black-spotted body that is small even compared to domestic cats. The wild feline measures only 14 to 20 inches (36 to 52 centimeters) long, stands about 8 inches (20 cm) tall and weighs about 2 to 6 lbs. (1 to 3 kilograms), according to the International Society for Endangered Cats (black-footed cats are listed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature).




Admittedly, those measurements don't sound very impressive when compared to the sizable big cats that are among the world's most fearsome predators. But despite its small size, the black-footed cat hunts and brings down more prey in a single night than a leopard does in six months, according to the PBS Nature miniseries "Super Cats." 


The second episode in the miniseries aired on PBS last night (Oct. 31). It featured an unprecedented glimpse of the black-footed cat, along with views of other fascinating and elusive wild felines, such as a pregnant jaguar in Costa Rica, a rare swamp tiger in India and a family of fishing cats — the only semiaquatic cats — in the wetlands of Asia.


For the latest episode, titled "Cats in Every Corner," filmmakers captured never-before-seen views of black-footed cats by collaborating with researcher Alex Sliwa, a curator at the Cologne Zoo in Germany who has studied the black-footed cat since the 1990s. Through Sliwa, the series' makers gained access to several small cats that had already been fitted with radio collars at a study site in South Africa, "Super Cats" producer Gavin Boyland told Live Science.


Black-Footed Cat/Petcha

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A real killer

Filming the tiny cats proved unusually challenging, Boyland said. Because the black-footed cats are so small, they're harder to track through tall grasses than big cats are. Since the little cats hunt mostly at night, the production crew needed to use a special light-sensitive camera to detect the felines at all, recording footage of hunting behavior that had never been captured before, Boyland explained.


And when it comes to hunting, as the filmmakers saw, the black-footed cat is extraordinarily efficient — "a real powerhouse," said Luke Hunter, Chief Conservation Officer at Panthera, a global wildcat-conservation organization.


Hunter, who served as a scientific consultant for "Super Cats," explained that small predators like the black-footed cat have accelerated metabolisms, which they need to keep fueled all the time, "so they're constantly hunting," he said. 




Black-footed cats use three very different techniques to nab their prey. One method is known as "fast hunting," in which the cats bound quickly and "almost randomly" through the tall grass, flushing out small prey such as birds or rodents, Hunter said. Another of their methods takes them on a slower course through their habitat, with the cats weaving quietly and carefully to sneak up on potential prey.


Finally, they use a sit-and-wait approach near rodents' burrows, a technique called still hunting, Hunter said.


"They wait for up to 2 hours, [staying] absolutely immobile, just silently waiting at the burrow for a rodent to appear. And then they nab it," Hunter told Live Science.


"The deadliest little cat on Earth"

In one night, a black-footed cat kills between 10 and 14 rodents or small birds, averaging a kill about every 50 minutes, according to Hunter. With a 60 percent success rate, black-footed cats are about three times as successful as lions, which average a successful kill about 20 to 25 percent of the time, Hunter said.


"If you're a gazelle or a wildebeest, a black-footed cat isn't at all deadly. But those success rates make them the deadliest little cat on Earth," he said.




Black-footed cats represent but one species in a highly diverse feline family, many of which are difficult to observe in the wild and are not well-understood. And though most of the felines that appear in "Super Cats" face serious threats of habitat loss and destruction from human activity, conservation efforts can yet preserve vulnerable populations, Hunter said.


"I believe it's mostly not doom and gloom. But if we don't actively conserve these species, if we don't work to reduce those threats, then we could lose some of these animals," he added.


Episode 2 of "Super Cats" is available to stream beginning today (Nov. 1). You can also watch Episode 1 — "Extreme Lives" — and learn more about the miniseries on the PBS Nature website and on PBS apps. Episode 3, "Science and Secrets," premieres Wednesday, Nov. 7, at 8 p.m. on PBS (check local listings).


Originally published on Live Science.

https://www.livescience.com/63992-deadliest-cat.html?utm_source=notification


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