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Member Run Boards >> Cats and Critters >> Big cats prowl the bush http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1277554509 Message started by freediver on Jun 26th, 2010 at 10:15pm |
Title: Big cats prowl the bush Post by freediver on Jun 26th, 2010 at 10:15pm
Cats are bad: http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1183443761
Very interesting article from the Weekend Australian Magazine: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/features/big-cats-prowl-the-bush/story-e6frg8h6-1225883808451 HELICOPTERS hover noisily overhead, the occupants scanning the sheep-filled paddocks, undulating grassy terrain fringed with dark, forbidding bush. On the ground, rangers comb the property, deep in the Victorian countryside. Their hand-held radios briefly crackle into life, sounding hard and scratchy amid the dull “thwock, thwock, thwock” of the helicopter blades above. State-of-the-art thermal imaging equipment throws up heat signatures of wildlife and livestock, transforming flesh and blood into blobby splashes of red with yellow-green haloes as the rangers scan the land for something large and out-of-place. Something alien and deadly. Something on a killing spree. Hollywood couldn’t have done it better. But this isn’t an action sequence from some creature feature; these events actually took place in 1997 on a farm near Woodside, a small town in Victoria’s Gippsland, part of an effort by the state’s Department of Sustainability and the Environment (DSE) to deal with an unknown predator that had slaughtered more than 400 sheep in two years, each victim expertly dispatched (and devoured) with the efficiency of a butcher. DSE officials were stumped, and they were pulling out all stops to try to solve the mystery that had so far cost a Victorian farmer thousands of dollars in lost stock – and threatened the credibility of the department. Trapping, snaring and fur traps had all failed to reveal the true nature of the beast, so thermal imaging equipment was employed in an eleventh-hour bid to halt the stock losses. There was talk of wild dogs at the time, but none of the corpses bore the hallmarks of dog attacks. There was no mess and little blood, and most of the corpses were devoid of flesh with only head, hide and hooves left behind. It was, for the most part, a clean, clinical kill every time. Just as unusual – and even more disturbing – was the discovery early one morning of several sheep standing in a field, their faces mauled beyond recognition. They were still alive – just – but where a snout should have protruded from each woolly face there was now just a mass of red, shredded flesh and broken cartilage and bone. |
Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by synergyshift on Jun 26th, 2010 at 10:28pm
journos dredge this story up every twenty years or so for each new generation. One theory is that they are panthers which have bred from "pets" brought into the country by returning or on-leave servicemen during world war 2. (Thing were a lot less left wing and regulated in those days, there was a war on, you couldn't afford luxuries like that.)
They couldn't take the animals out again or back to their home countries so they simply dumped them. Servicemen on leave or in Australia for medical treatment were often housed in regional areas, Medlow Bath in NSW and places like that. |
Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by locutius on Jun 29th, 2010 at 12:26pm
I'd be on the lookout for a Jolly Swagman.
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Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by mozzaok on Jun 29th, 2010 at 1:48pm
I do not know how big a feral cat could possibly get, but I saw one 35 years ago, whilst in the bush, that was the size of a bull terrier, but a lot less stocky, though obviously very well fed.
I do not know how quickly they can breed up, but they are frighteningly efficient killing machines, and have no place on our continent. Whether the stories of dumped panthers were true, I would have imagined somebody would have found conclusive evidence by now, so I tend to discount that theory. Big ferals on the other hand, are very real, and very dangerous, and if I had the choice of trying to defend myself from a Rottweiler or a big feral, then I would choose the rotty any day. |
Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by Imperium on Jun 29th, 2010 at 2:55pm
That's ignorant, Mozzaok. Our feral animals have every right to be here; they are as Australian as Kangaroos or Koalas. Their frequent depredations on our so called "native" (Pah! All species were immigrants once) are due to a lack of opportunity and discrimination against them by native Kangaroos and Koalas. The size of these feral cats you speak of is due to their socioeconomic circumstances; if these cats had better access to education, they would be able to afford healthy, unprocessed foods.
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Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by Deborahmac09 on Jun 29th, 2010 at 3:27pm
Australian was the home of the most powerful cat.
Australian Marsupial Lion. All the rest at kittens! |
Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by gizmo_2655 on Jul 2nd, 2010 at 9:19pm shampain socialist wrote on Jun 26th, 2010 at 10:28pm:
That's a different version... The one I heard was that the 'panthers' were the mascots of a US Airforce unit stationed in Victoria.... I hadn't heard the 'returned or on leave servicemen' version..... |
Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by freediver on May 29th, 2013 at 8:10pm
This Topic was moved here from Chat by freediver.
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Title: Re: Big cats prowl the bush Post by Jovial Monk on Sep 3rd, 2020 at 11:07am
Fortunately the domestic cat does not have a gene for gigantism!
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