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Join in on this Discussion and see the pictures. Click here-> : Origin of Cheetahs


95whitepep
01-07-2009, 04:05 PM
Ancient Fossil Suggests Origin of Cheetahs

A nearly complete skull of a primitive cheetah that sprinted about in China more than 2 million years ago suggests the agile cats originated in the Old World rather than in the Americas.

The skull was discovered in Gansu Province, China, and represents a new cheetah species, now dubbed Acinonyx kurteni. The animal probably lived some time between 2.2 million and 2.5 million years ago, the researchers estimate, making the specimen one of the oldest cheetah fossils identified to date.

"This is extremely exciting stuff," said Luke Hunter, executive director of Panthera, an organization that aims to conserve the world's wild cats. "We know amazingly little about the evolutionary history of most of the large cats, with the cheetah being a prime example: The existing fossils we have are largely similar to the modern cheetah," said Hunter, who was not involved in the current discovery.

Cheetahs are the fastest land animals, capable of reaching speeds of 75 mph (120 kph), but they are not good climbers, unlike others in the cat family - Felidae. Still they are carnivores, like the other big cats. Today, cheetahs live primarily in Africa in the wild. Their status is threatened worldwide.

Cheetah features

Scientists have long debated the origin of these super-fast felines, with clues coming from relatively few fossils. These include the European Acinonyx pardinensis with an estimated age of 2.2 million years, and the North African A. aicha, which dates to about 2.5 million years ago.

Making things more confusing, fossils of cheetah-like cats in the Miracinonyx genus (also called American cheetahs) have been discovered in North America.

"This new fossil is around as old as the oldest cheetah fossils we already have," Hunter told LiveScience, "but unlike all those, it has a unique set of 'primitive' characteristics that strongly suggest it is an earlier ancestor to all cheetahs, allowing us to go back deeper in the evolutionary sequence of the cheetah."

For instance, the cat had enlarged sinuses for air intake during sprinting, as do modern cheetahs. But its teeth showed primitive features.

"The enlarged sinuses cause the forehead of the skull to bulge. If you look at a cheetah's skull, it is remarkably tall and domed compared to similar sized cats such as pumas, ocelots or leopards, in particular around the upper nose region," said researcher Per Christiansen of the Zoological Museum in Denmark.

"Our specimen also has a bulging nose, and, presumably large air sinuses for fast running," Christiansen said. "So running fast and becoming really good at it was one of the first steps in cheetah evolution. Later, the teeth changed as well."

Christiansen and Ji Mazák of the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum detailed the finding this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The research was supported by a grant from the Carlsberg Foundation.

Cat home

The scientists say the newly analyzed cheetah is the most primitive known to date, which sheds light on cheetahs' original home.

"Because this new skull is more primitive than both cheetahs and Miracinonyx cats, and was found in China, it argues for a Eurasian/African ancestry of the entire group, with the Miracinonyx cats (or their ancestors) dispersing into the Americas later," Hunter said.

The new species brings the tally to five or six (scientists are not sure whether one of the previously found specimens is from a cheetah) cheetah and cheetah-like species known, with only one still alive today. (The living cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus, is found almost exclusively along African grasslands and semi-deserts.)

"It suggests that the 'sprinting cat' specialization is a fragile one, prone to extinction even under natural circumstances," Hunter said. "In light of this, we need to remind ourselves how imperiled the cheetah of today finds itself, where the threats are primarily human ones. If we lose this cheetah, it would be the end of this wonderful, unique lineage of sprinting cats."

BATMAN
01-07-2009, 10:23 PM
*shakes head*

95whitepep
01-07-2009, 10:29 PM
http://www.threadbombing.com/data/media/54/facepalm_statue.jpg

$100T2
01-07-2009, 10:32 PM
Cheetahs are amazing. If I could train one to be a pet without any worry, that would be awesome.

95whitepep
01-07-2009, 10:34 PM
Cheetahs are amazing. If I could train one to be a pet without any worry, that would be awesome.


Train them to fetch you dinner....quickly!

I thought it was cool that the only way to get them to breed in captivity is to set up a 'rabbit' and have them chase it....gets them in the mood.

BATMAN
01-08-2009, 09:21 AM
They are more like dogs than cats. their social behavior is more like a dog.

they bark, not meow or roar.

problem is that their body don't retain fat and if they don't eat for a couple of days they just die.

95whitepep
01-08-2009, 02:43 PM
They are more like dogs than cats. their social behavior is more like a dog.

they bark, not meow or roar.

problem is that their body don't retain fat and if they don't eat for a couple of days they just die.


yes they do purr like other felines.

Whos the fluffy kittah!

oakback
01-09-2009, 12:10 PM
Cheetahs are amazing. If I could train one to be a pet without any worry, that would be awesome.

from bikeforums.net:

Wow, I just made a new discovery about the ancient past. In 1986 I took a class that met at the Hopcraft game ranch, which was just south of Nairobi in Kenya. It wasn't a game ranch in the sense of lame-o rich trophy hunters coming to bag an easy kill. Hopcraft's mission (http://www.fao.org/docrep/u8750t/u8750T04.htm) was to show that it would be economically advantageous to use wild animals as a primary source of meat, instead of domesticated cattle. Cattle cause numerous environmental problems, but he knew that argument wouldn't fly, so he needed to come up with an economic argument. I was reminded of this recently when I read an article pushing a similar thing in Australia: Put kangaroos and camels on Australian eco-menu (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090104/sc_afp/australiaclimatefood). During our stay on the ranch we ate numerous exotic beasts like giraffe, zebra, eland, gazelle, etc., and participated in the "cropping" of a giraffe.

During our stay on the ranch we never met the Hopcrafts; I think they were out of the country at that time. However, we met their pet cheetah, named Duma. Duma is Swahili for cheetah (although we learned it as nduma; Google leads to both translations). It's like naming your cat "Cat," or your dog "Dog." We hung out with Duma a couple of times. Here are some of my pics of Duma:

http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/kenya_duma.jpg

http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/kenya_duma_lick.jpg

http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/kenya_duma_dog.jpg

http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/kenya_duma_crowd.jpg

So obviously Duma was a bad-ass animal to have as a pet. Well, I just learned some more information about Duma and the Hopcrafts. At the time of my visit, the Hopcrafts had a young son named Xan (short for Alexander). I believe he was two years old then. So Xan grew up having a cheetah as a pet. One day years later Duma died suddenly of liver failure. A few years after that Xan and his mother wrote a children's book called How it Was With Dooms (http://www.amazon.com/How-Was-Dooms-Aladdin-Picture/dp/0689835396/). The book described how Duma came to the family, and what it was like to have a cheetah as a pet.

http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/dooms.jpg

Well apparently someone in the movie biz who read the book thought it had movie potential, and the Hopcrafts sold the movie rights. So someone adapted the book into a fictionalized story about a boy and his pet cheetah, and the movie was to be called Duma. It turned out to be cheaper to make the movie in South Africa, so the writers also changed the story location to South Africa, which annoyed the Hopcrafts, but they otherwise liked the story. One odd thing is that Duma means cheetah in Swahili, but they don't speak Swahili in South Africa.

Unfortunately, despite the warm critical praise for Duma (93% positive at Rotten Tomatoes (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/duma/)), Warner Brothers abandoned the movie and it only opened at a few theaters in 2005 and then faded away.

But, Duma is available on DVD at Amazon! (http://www.amazon.com/Duma-Widescreen-Alex-Michaeletos/dp/B0009XRZVU/)

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Y4VS94XAL._SS500_.jpg

So now I've got a book and a DVD to buy.

Anyways, I thought it was cool that I met a cheetah that inspired a book that inspired a movie. :D

BackyardSog
01-09-2009, 03:46 PM
http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f155/tacksharp/Kenya/kenya_duma.jpg

Beautiful

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