5 research outputs found

    Rediscovery of the Bornean bay cat

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    The bay cat Catopuma badia has been rediscovered in Borneo, where it is endemic and where there have been no confirmed sightings since 1928. In November 1992 an adult female, which had been captured by native trappers on the Sarawak-Indonesian border and kept in captivity for some months, was brought into the Sarawak Museum on the point of death. It was only the seventh known specimen and the first of a whole animal. In appearance it bears a striking resemblance to Temminck's cat C. temminckii, although it is much smaller. Genetic analysis of blood and tissue samples will assist in clarifying its taxonomic status

    Lowe’s Otter Civet Cynogale lowei does not exist

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    Lowe’s Otter Civet Cynogale lowei is known from only one specimen, which was collected in the winter of 1926-27 in northern Vietnam. It has been considered to be a global priority for small carnivore conservation. Its taxonomic status – a species or a highly disjunct subspecies of Otter Civet C. bennettii – has been debated. This study assessed the taxonomic validity of Lowe’s Otter Civet through three principal methods: (i) a gross morphological comparison of tropical Asian otters, Otter Civet and ‘Specimen 1927.12.1.93’ (the Lowe’s Otter Civet holotype), (ii) microscopic hair analysis from museum specimens of tropical Asian otters, Otter Civet and Specimen 1927.12.1.93 and (iii) DNA analysis of genetic material extracted from Specimen 1927.12.1.93, which was then compared with sequences from tropical Asian otters and Otter Civet. All methods indicated that the specimen is a juvenile Eurasian Otter Lutra lutra. The IUCN SSC Small Carnivore Specialist Group, conservation donors and practitioners should all immediately disregard ’Lowe’s Otter Civet’ as a priority, to ensure that the limited resources for conservation are not wasted

    1997 Amerasia Journal

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