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	<title>Comments on: The Onca, Mystery Cat of Brazil Remains as Elusive as Ever</title>
	<link>http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptid-universe/the-onca-mystery-cat/</link>
	<description>for Bigfoot, Loch Ness, and More</description>
	<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jul 2008 21:05:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>by: kittenz</title>
		<link>http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptid-universe/the-onca-mystery-cat/#comment-14514</link>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Oct 2006 22:35:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptid-universe/the-onca-mystery-cat/#comment-14514</guid>
					<description>I saw the photo of the Onza that was killed, I'm not sure when but I think around 1996. The local people said it was an Onza. It looked like what you might get if you could cross a cheetah with a puma: very small head, VERY long, lanky limbs &#38; slender body. It was the color of a puma but had some darkish stripe markings on the upper insides of its arms. DNA testing later proved it to be a subspecies of Puma concolor. So it wasn't a different species after all. But the local people recognized it as different from pumas or jaguars.

I have also seen photos of very unusually colored jaguars, which were incompletely melanistic. They range from almost entirely black with tan or silvery fur near the face, to half-black, half-spotted animals, to animals that were spotted but had a very dark brown base color. I was astonished that such a wide range of melanism exists in jaguars. I always thought that they were either spotted all over, or black all over. Of course I know that the black cats still have the spot pattern, but I had no grasp of the variation that occurs. There are credible reports of albino (or more likely leucistic) jaguars, which have a coloration similar to that of white tiger: bluish-gray or brownish spots on a white background color. I have not been able to find photographs of the white jaguars, but I have seen photos of the oddly colored, incompletely melanistic ones.

Within historical times the jaguar's range extended into the USA, all the way to the Mississippi Delta (but, surprisingly,  apparently not into Florida), quite a way up the Mississippi Valley, and westward to southern California. I think it's possible that the jaguar may be repopulating some of that range. Recently jaguars were confirmed to be living in extreme southern Texas. Some of the black big cats that are being sighted, at least in the south &#38; southwest, could be jaguars.

South America has some of the least explored wilderness areas on earth. I would not be at all surprised if some previously undescribed species of big cat lives there. With the world warming up, I think it is very possible that some tropical species could be expanding their ranges northward.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I saw the photo of the Onza that was killed, I&#8217;m not sure when but I think around 1996. The local people said it was an Onza. It looked like what you might get if you could cross a cheetah with a puma: very small head, VERY long, lanky limbs &amp; slender body. It was the color of a puma but had some darkish stripe markings on the upper insides of its arms. DNA testing later proved it to be a subspecies of Puma concolor. So it wasn&#8217;t a different species after all. But the local people recognized it as different from pumas or jaguars.</p>
<p>I have also seen photos of very unusually colored jaguars, which were incompletely melanistic. They range from almost entirely black with tan or silvery fur near the face, to half-black, half-spotted animals, to animals that were spotted but had a very dark brown base color. I was astonished that such a wide range of melanism exists in jaguars. I always thought that they were either spotted all over, or black all over. Of course I know that the black cats still have the spot pattern, but I had no grasp of the variation that occurs. There are credible reports of albino (or more likely leucistic) jaguars, which have a coloration similar to that of white tiger: bluish-gray or brownish spots on a white background color. I have not been able to find photographs of the white jaguars, but I have seen photos of the oddly colored, incompletely melanistic ones.</p>
<p>Within historical times the jaguar&#8217;s range extended into the USA, all the way to the Mississippi Delta (but, surprisingly,  apparently not into Florida), quite a way up the Mississippi Valley, and westward to southern California. I think it&#8217;s possible that the jaguar may be repopulating some of that range. Recently jaguars were confirmed to be living in extreme southern Texas. Some of the black big cats that are being sighted, at least in the south &amp; southwest, could be jaguars.</p>
<p>South America has some of the least explored wilderness areas on earth. I would not be at all surprised if some previously undescribed species of big cat lives there. With the world warming up, I think it is very possible that some tropical species could be expanding their ranges northward.
</p>
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		<title>by: FreeThinker</title>
		<link>http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptid-universe/the-onca-mystery-cat/#comment-11263</link>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Aug 2006 13:58:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.cryptomundo.com/cryptid-universe/the-onca-mystery-cat/#comment-11263</guid>
					<description>I'd love to see a photo of it. It sounds interesting. Almost like a liger, but some  spots.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;d love to see a photo of it. It sounds interesting. Almost like a liger, but some  spots.
</p>
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