Friday, June 17, 2016

A Leopard Enters a Home in Kathmandu Kuleshower



The panther (Panthera pardus) (English elocution:/ˈlɛpərd/) is one of the five "major felines" in the class Panthera. It is an individual from the family Felidae with a wide range in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. Fossil records found in Italy recommend that in the Pleistocene it ran similarly as Europe and Japan. Contrasted with different individuals from Felidae, the panther has generally short legs and a long body with an extensive skull. It is comparative in appearance to the puma, yet is littler and all the more gently fabricated. Its hide is set apart with rosettes like those of the puma, however the panther's rosettes are littler and all the more thickly stuffed, and don't as a rule have focal spots as the panther's do. Both panthers and pumas that are melanistic are known as dark jaguars. The panther's achievement in the wild is because of its all around covered hide; its astute chasing conduct, wide eating routine, and quality to move substantial corpses into trees; its capacity to adjust to different living spaces going from rainforest to steppe and including bone-dry and montane zones; and to keep running at rates up to 58 kilometers for each hour (36 mph).

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