• @NOT_RICK
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      1668 months ago

      I guess because one is Pink

    • Boozilla
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      8 months ago

      I think the mountain lion / cougar is sometimes called a panther, too. Like the Florida panther.

      The word is a little bit like raptor is used for some birds. It means big cat.

        • @[email protected]
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          448 months ago

          Oxford English Dictionary:

          panther | ˈpænθər | noun

          a leopard, especially a black one.

          • North American English a large American wild cat with a plain tawny to grayish coat, found from Canada to Patagonia. Also called cougar, mountain lion, puma

          • @Nurse_Robot
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            128 months ago

            Imagine arguing nomenclature and being this much of a dick about it

        • @[email protected]
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          138 months ago

          especially

          This implies that it’s more common for black furred leapords and jaguars to be called panthers, but other things can be called panthers too.

          • @[email protected]
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            8 months ago

            Isn’t the “especially” part an injection which could be left out, so essentially: “A panther is a large wild cat, […], with black fur”?

            • @[email protected]
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              138 months ago

              Genera are within families, not the other way around. Maybe read a book?

              Also: the genus Panthera consists of 5 big cats. The other two big cats that aren’t in Panthera are the cougar, which is also colloquially called a panther, and the cheetah.

              So, in fact, “panther” can refer to any big cat other than cheetahs.

            • @[email protected]
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              68 months ago

              Dude, you clearly know nothing about taxonomy or big cats. You just want to be pedantic, but you are flat out wrong

          • @dohpaz42
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            198 months ago

            Oh no! You’re right. How dare I use a dictionary of all things to define words? What was I thinking. Of course your superior intellect could easily see through my charade. Whatever would we do without you around to point out our mistakes?

            Shut up.

          • @agent_flounder
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            98 months ago

            Are you being an asshole about it? Oh wait I don’t need to look it up lol

      • Yer Ma
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        138 months ago

        Thanks! I even had a black house cat that had spots in the sun

      • @CptEnder
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        48 months ago

        Aggg I just wanna scritch that butt!

    • @Plopp
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      188 months ago

      Also called sunspots, caused by the panther’s magnetic flux.

  • @[email protected]
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    188 months ago

    The Jaguar has a scientific name: the Panthera onca
    Originally, the jaguar inhabited from northern Argentine Patagonia to the southern United States. The threats affecting the feline include deforestation and habitat loss, hunting, and jaguar and other animal roadkill. Due to its wide geographical distribution, the same species is called by various names depending on the culture and region it inhabited: jaguar, el pintado, onça pintada, nahuel, American tiger, jaguar, balam, otorongo, among others.

  • Twinklebreeze
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    118 months ago

    I thought it was called revitiligo.

  • @Ejh3k
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    98 months ago

    My university’s mascot was a panther. And while I was on student government we tried to pass a resolution that basically said that because we were at an institute of higher learning we shouldn’t have a mascot that empirically doesn’t exist.

    It didn’t get passed.

    What’s funnier to me is that they changed their mascot to essentially be a mountain lion. We have absolutely zero mountains anywhere near us.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      Mountain lion only describes one type of habitat cougars live in, they have the widest distribution of all the big cats and live in a variety of habitats, including the Everglades swamp in Florida, in canyons, and in areas with a lot of scrubby brush they can ambush from.

      • @CptEnder
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        38 months ago

        Coney Island cougars are pretty chill if you give em a chopped cheese and a Newport

  • dream_weasel
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    38 months ago

    For anyone else interested, melanism does not exist in humans. So no…

  • @[email protected]
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    28 months ago

    Can a panther be born from two black panthers and not be black? I don’t know about their habits, do they have prides and would that pride end up with mixed black panthers, Leopards, Jaguars in it? or do these get kicked out?

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      Lions are the only big cats that form prides (and interestingly have never been observed with melanism IIRC), other big cats are solitary except for the first year or two of their lives while learning from their mother. After they reach adulthood they’re all kicked out of mom’s territory. But within that one litter you can definitely have some spotted and some all black!

      • @CptEnder
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        18 months ago

        Do cheetahs not also pack together? Feel like I’ve seen pictures of them in groups.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          AFAIK cheetahs only hang out in groups in the wild when it’s mom and her cubs learning to hunt, or adult males from the same litter may hang out together as adults.

    • SjmarfOP
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      58 months ago

      Can a panther be born from two black panthers and not be black?

      Based on my rudimentary high-school knowledge of alleles, the answer would be “yes” for some jaguar pairings, with a 25% chance of getting a regular jaguar in those pairings. It wouldn’t be possible for leopards.

      I’m not an expert though so if I’m wrong feel free to correct me

  • @regdog
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    -158 months ago

    I alredy knew that