![]() |
|
|
Status: Endangered in Indiana, though numbers are rebounding. Overall good throughout their native habitat. Diet in wild: Small animals, including rabbits, birds, snakes. Life span in wild: 12 to 20 years. Weight: Males 30 to 70 pounds; females 15 to 50 pounds. Native habitat: North American forests.
Think you want a bobcat?? Read this from the USDA.
Black Pine Animal Park 1426 W. 300 N. P.O. Box 02 Albion, IN 46701 (260) 636-7383
©2008
Professional Animal Retirement Center, Inc.
|
Bobcat North America is home to this member of the small cat family, called a bobcat. It gets its name from the short, twitchy tail it sports. Walter and O'Malley Unfortunately many people think these attractive small cats might make a neat pet, but they don't. These carnivores can live into their late teens in captivity and grow to weigh up to 40 pounds. In nature they are quite solitary and nocturnal, preying on rabbits and other small mammals, snakes, and birds. One of the biggest problems with trying to raise a bobcat as a pet is that they can be aggressive, and they spray urine to mark their territory - Yuck!
To learn more about keeping animals like these as pets, click here. |