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Pallas's cats have been reported to live up to 11 years in captivity.
Pallas's cat has an especially complicated taxonomic history.
Keeping Pallas's cats healthy in captivity is difficult.
Pallas's cat was initially placed in the genus Felis.
Like other species of exotic felines, Pallas's Cat has been hunted for its fur.
Pallas's cats are solitary.
The argali and Pallas's Cat are protected under Kazakhstan's red book of protected species.
The Pallas's cat, which looks somewhat like a house cat, is very rare in Ladakh and not much is known about the species.
About 1,000 hunters of Pallas's cats are in Mongolia, with a mean estimated harvest of two cats per year.
As a result, the genus Otocolobus has been resurrected and Pallas's cat has been reclassified (again).
Pallas's cat (Otocolobus manul)
Pallas's cats give birth to a litter of around two to six kittens after a gestation period of 66 to 75 days, typically in April or May.
The bloated genus was later split into many smaller genera, resulting in Pallas's cat being reclassified as the only member of the genus Otocolobus.
In Beldeutas, there are rare species of animals such as argali, golden eagle, saker falcon, black stork, eagle owl, and Pallas's cat.
Lineage 5: Prionailurus (spotted Asian wildcats), Otocolobus (Pallas's cat)
The Asian Cat exhibit includes Amur Tigers, Snow Leopards and Pallas's Cats.
Pallas's cat was named after the German naturalist Peter Simon Pallas, who first described the species in 1776 under the binomial Felis manul.
In 2010, there were 47 Pallas's cats in 19 institutions that are members of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, and four litters were expected.
Until the early 1970s, only two Pallas's cats were recorded in the Transcaucasus, both encountered near the Araks River in southeastern Armenia, but no records existed from Azerbaijan.
In Mongolia, Pallas's Cat (Otocolobus manul) and Common Raven (Corvus corax) are considered potential predators of eggs in potentially both tree and cliff nests.
Other cats in Ladakh are even rarer than the snow leopard: the Lynx (ee), numbering only a few individuals, and the Pallas's cat, which looks somewhat like a house cat.
Pardisun Park contains the Biodiversity Museum, a wildlife park, a theatre, playgrounds and several other facilities In the park there live many animals like the Pallas's cat, or manul.
Pallas's cat (Otocolobus manul), also called the manul, is a small wild cat having a broad but patchy distribution in the grasslands and montane steppe of Central Asia.
The Pallas's cat is the size of a domestic cat, but it is different from an ordinary cat it that it has a dense body with short thick legs and very thick hair.
Siberian Ibex, Snow Leopards, Eurasian Lynx, Pallas's Cats, Grey Wolves, Red Foxes, Turkmenian Weasels, Stoats and Brown Bears.
Pallas Cat (Otocolobus manul)
Pallas' cat (Otocolobus manul)
In Mongolia, Pallas's Cat (Otocolobus manul) and Common Raven (Corvus corax) are considered potential predators of eggs in potentially both tree and cliff nests.
Pallas's cat (Otocolobus manul), also called the manul, is a small wild cat having a broad but patchy distribution in the grasslands and montane steppe of Central Asia.