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Twice the size of a large housecat, the fishing cat, Pronailurus
viverrinus, frequents wetlands where there is plenty of surrounding
vegetation such as mangroves and marshes in southeastern
Asia. While most cats are built for running with long legs
and a long tail, the stocky fishing cat is built more for
strong swimming with short, powerful limbs and a rudder-like
tail. It also wears a coat of fur designed for an aquatic
lifestyle with a dense waterproof inner layer and a protective
outer layer of long, coarse hair.
As its name implies, the favored prey of the fishing cat is fish yet it also
hunts other aquatic animals such as crustaceans, frogs and waterfowl. Hunting
methods include scooping prey out of the water with its slightly webbed paws
and catching prey in its jaws while swimming. One particularly skilled technique
it uses is to swim underwater and attack unsuspecting ducks from below as they
surface. The fishing cat has also been observed to tap the surface of the water
lightly as it searches for prey, perhaps to mimic insects and attract fish. In
addition, the fishing cat opportunistically takes down terrestrial prey including
deer, pigs and rodents.
The primary threat the fishing cat faces is the destruction of its wetland habitats
as they are converted to agriculture and aquaculture or polluted by pesticides.
A related threat, over-fishing reduces the cat’s prey base, forcing it
to seek out other options. These options include raiding poultry pens and fish
farm ponds, which then incurs the wrath of the farmers. Poaching for its black-spotted
and striped coat as well as its meat also persists.
Where Have All the Fishing Cats Gone?
By definition, small cats are physically small in size and, by
their nature, frequently shy and secretive and living in isolated,
inaccessible habitats. So it is not surprising that small cats
can be difficult to find in the wild. In the absence of field
data, scientists sometimes assume that any suitable habitat potentially
contains healthy small cat populations. The reality may be quite
different when field surveys are finally initiated, as we are
finding with fishing cats in Thailand. In 2004, the Fishing Cat
SSP and the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden funded a field
survey by Thai biologists Namfon Boontua and Budsabong Kanchanasaka
to locate fishing cats in prime wetland areas in southern Thailand.
Four months of camera trapping failed to find any sign of fishing
cats despite confirmed presence of numerous other wildlife species.
Another field survey is being planned for early 2005, with support
provided by the Cincinnati Zoo and other AZA institutions, to
assess wetland habitats further south on the Malay Peninsula.
This apparent scarcity of Thai fishing cats in the wild provides
added emphasis for our companion ex situ project to improve captive
breeding and genetic management of the fishing cats housed in
the Thai zoos.
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