
Source of Photograph.....
http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m7okyumo8W1rbjqh1o2_500.jpg
Genus: Lynx
Species: canadensis
Please stay tuned for the next installment.....
A not so common animal is the Canadian lynx. The lynx is almost identical to a regular house cat, but larger. It has a powerful body on short, furry legs attached to hefty feet, and a bobbed, black-tipped tail. Its fur is spotted and yellowish-brown to grey. It has a collar of fur around its face, giving a triangular shape. It also has long black ear tufts.
The lynx can grow up to 2 -4 feet as an adult, and is about 2 feet high in the shoulders. It weighs about 11 - 45 pounds.
The male has a hunting range of about 20 square miles and females have about half that size. It likes to travel alone, and searches up to twelve miles during the night in search of food. In the spring the female will have a litter of four kittens under a log or bush. The kittens are born blind and helpless, and grow slowly. They are weaned at two months but stay with their mother for about a year.
There aren't as many lynxes because their habitats are being destroyed. They are also hunted for their fur and meat. In Europe the lynx has almost been wiped out because farmers think it is a pest and that it kills sheep, goats and other livestock. It is waiting to be put on the endangered list in the United States. With strong laws to protect it the lynx is making a slow comeback.
by Dillon B. 200o.
bibliography:
"Northern Lynx", http://www.lam.mus.ca.us/~pcannon/cats/northern.html, (June 2000).
"Taiga Animals", http://mbgnet.mobot.org/sets/Taiga/animals/index.htm, (June 2000).
http://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/canadian_lynx.htm

