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    The African wild cat or desert cat (Felis silvestris libyca) is a subspecies of the wild cat (F. silvestris). It was first domesticated by the Ancient Egyptians at least 4,000 years ago, and is generally believed to be the ancestor of the domestic cat.


        African wild cat
            Physical characteristics
            Distribution and habitat
            Behaviour
            Subspecies
    NameAfrican Wild Cat
    StatusLC
    image
    RegnumAnimalia
    PhylumChordate
    ClassisMammalia
    OrdoCarnivora
    FamiliaFelidae
    GenusFelis
    SpeciesWild cat
    SubspeciesF. s. libyca
    TrinomialFelis silvestris libyca
    Trinomial AuthorityJohann Reinhold Forster

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    Physical characteristics

    The African wild cat is sandy brown to yellow gray in color, with black stripes on the tail. The fur is shorter than that of the European subspecies. It is also considerably smaller: the head-body length is 45 to 75 cm, the tail 20 to 38 cm, and the weight ranges from 3 to 6.5 kg.

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    Distribution and habitat

    The African wild cat is found in Africa in the Middle East, in a wide range of habitats: steppes, savannas and bushland; as long as there is some place to hide, like shrumbs or high grass.

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    Behaviour

    The African wild cat eats primarily mice, rats and other small mammals. If the situation permits, they also eat birds, reptiles, amphibians and insects. The cat approaches its prey slowly, and attacks as soon as it reaches a distance of about 1 meter.

    The African wild cat is mainly active during the night and twilight. At daytime they usually hide in the bushes, although they are sometimes active on dark, cloudy days.

    The territory of a male overlaps with that of a few females, who defend the territory against intruders. A female gives birth to two to six (three on average) kittens. The gestation lasts between 56 to 69 days. The kittens are born blind and need the full care of the mother. Most kittens are born in the wet season, when there is sufficient food. They stay with their mother for five to six months, and are fertile after one year.

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    Subspecies

    Many biologists make a distinction between various geographical breeds. Some even consider them separate subspecies. Some examples are:

      Felis silvestris brockmani - Horn of Africa
      Felis silvestris caffra - Southern Africa
      Felis silvestris foxi - West Africa
      Felis silvestris griselda - Southwest Africa
      Felis silvestris libyca - North Africa
      Felis silvestris ocreata - Ethiopia
      Felis silvestris sarda - Sardinia, Sicily
     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    MIT OpenCourseWare
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "African wild cat". link