Biologists are fascinated by this bobcat's ability to survive and thrive in the wild
By Paolo Uggetti
A
missing leg is not preventing a female bobcat found in the Santa Monica
Mountains from taking care of itself and its one-eared kitten.
National Park
Service researchers spotted this three-legged bobcat through a camera on
the Western side of the range. The bobcat was then caught and looked at
by biologists, but a cause for the missing leg could not be determined. "It's not clear whether the missing leg is a birth defect or an early-life injury," the NPS said in a blog post.
The bobcat --
identified as B-337 -- was given a tracking collar and its blood samples
were also analyzed in hopes of finding out more information. It was
then released back into the wild.
"Bobcats catch
live prey, so that means she's managing to hunt with one front leg--and
doing it well enough to feed herself and her kitten," said biologist
Joanne Moriarty in the post.
The bobcat's
kitten, which is not missing a leg, had been caught a few days prior.
Biologists did discover that the kitten is missing its left ear.
Biologists
say that the only noticeable difference from these bobcats to others
not having deformities is that their home base or their area of roaming
is not as expansive.
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