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Leopard Fishing In The Mud
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Nowell and Jackson note that resource partitioning occurs where the leopard shares its range with the lion or tiger: the leopard tends to take smaller prey, usually less than 75 kg, where its large cousins are present. In the Chitwan National Park in Nepal, leopards killed prey ranging from less than 25 kg to 100 kg in weight with most kills in the 25-50 kg range; tigers killed more prey in the 50-100 kg range. In the tropical forests of Nagarhole National Park in India, tigers selected prey weighing more than 176 kg, whereas leopards selected prey in the 30-175 kg range. The average weights of leopard prey was 37.6 kg, and of tiger prey was 91.5 kg with a bias towards adult males of chital, sambar and wild pig, and young gaur. One tropical forest study suggests that leopards do not always avoid the larger cats by hunting at different times. With relatively abundant prey, tigers and leopards were seen to successfully coexist without competitive exclusion or inter-species dominance hierarchies that may be more common to the savanna. In areas with high tiger populations, such in the central parts of Kanha National Park in India, leopards are not permanent residents, but only transients. They were common near villages at the periphery of the park and outside the park.
Hybrids
Crossbreeding between leopards and other members of the genus Panthera has been documented, resulting in hybrids. A cross between a female lioness and a male leopard is known as a leopon (or a lipard if the sex of the parents is reversed). Leopons have been bred in captivity; a well-documented case occurred at the Koshien Hanshin Park in Nishinomiya, Japan in the late 1950s. Although lions and leopards may come in to contact in sub-Saharan Africa, they are not widely believed to interbreed naturally. However, there have been anecdotal reports of lion-leopard crosses, known as "marozis", in several African countries.
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