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African Leopards

Luipaard Offline
Leopard enthusiast
( This post was last modified: 05-12-2019, 05:08 AM by Luipaard )

Male leopard from Aberdare, Kenya (one of the larger leopards becouse of low density of lions in that area)



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United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
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Anderson Male





Kruger Pair


Leopard and Juvenile Bush Elephant






Namibian Leopard


Kenyan 


Kruger


Masai Mara
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United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
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( This post was last modified: 05-14-2019, 02:35 AM by Pckts )

sabrewildlife

When #Hukumuricrosses into #Londolozi and comes back with a follower



Kruger Male


Sabi Sands Male





Kruger Male


Botswana Male






Mating Pair








Tingana


Kruger Male


A large and lean beautiful male.


tonywebb.aratasphotography

The Sweni Waterhole Leopard. 




Big boy of Maasai Mara looking for Kaboso

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United States Pckts Offline
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howard.cleland
A GLANCE FROM THE BOSS:
The biggest cat I have ever seen looked like a lion until I picked up my 600mil. The beast of Lower Sabie had an impala in a tree and he came down to quench his thirst. Always looking at me.
Exhilarating.
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Luipaard Offline
Leopard enthusiast

Some individuals from lesser known areas:

A leopard from Niokolo Koba National Park (southeastern Senegal). Impressive skull size.



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"Gustave, un léopard sauvage capturé dans le nord de la Côte d'Ivoire, près des villages de Bouaké" (= wild leopard captured in the nord of Ivory Coast). Again, impressive skull.


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Morro and Mano Rivers that border Sierra Leone and Liberia


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From WWF Cameroon


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United States Pckts Offline
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Luipaard Offline
Leopard enthusiast
( This post was last modified: 05-30-2019, 05:46 PM by Luipaard )

Some examples of West-African leopards

From COMOE Chimpanzee Conservation Project:

"NOT ONLY CHIMPS are recorded with our camera traps. Leopards are common and widespread across Comoé National Park and we record them often, roaming around the same places where chimpanzees walk by. They are known for attacking chimps, although the apes can also defend themselves and even ocassionally kill the leopards. So far, we never detected chimp predation by leopards in our study area, which doesn"t mean that never happened"


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From Yankari National Park (Nigeria)


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A video of a female leopard in Benin (from OeBenin - Organisation pour la promotion de l’éducation des filles au Bénin). I somehow can't directly post the video so here's the link: https://www.facebook.com/OeBenin/videos/1400409106689467/

Camera trap of a male leopard in Benin from Pendjari National Park.


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Sad but rare sight: "Last Egyptian leopard killed this week in a natural reserve close to the Red Sea" (link)


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Luipaard Offline
Leopard enthusiast

Leopard from Niokolo Koba National Park, Senegal (source)


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Oman Lycaon Offline
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The Cape Leopard Trust

What better way to start a new week than with an epic leopard photo like this!! Our Cederberg team recently downloaded their latest batch of images from the camera traps, and among them was this absolute gem, taken in the height of winter near Bakleikraal in the Cederberg. 
This stunning adult male is known as CM41, or Gorib, which means ‘the spotted one’ in Central Khoisan languages. His name is particularly apt in this instance, with his dark rosettes in stark contrast to the white snowy surroundings. 
Downloading photos from the camera traps is always a treat, but images like these just make us jump for joy!


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Luipaard Offline
Leopard enthusiast

Male leopard from Mole National Park, Ghana


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United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
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Kruger Male


Male and Female in Kenya


Kruger Male


South Africa


Serengeti Leopard
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United States Pckts Offline
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Large framed Kruger Male


Okavango Delta Male
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BorneanTiger Offline
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(06-02-2019, 05:00 PM)Lycaon Wrote: The Cape Leopard Trust

What better way to start a new week than with an epic leopard photo like this!! Our Cederberg team recently downloaded their latest batch of images from the camera traps, and among them was this absolute gem, taken in the height of winter near Bakleikraal in the Cederberg. 
This stunning adult male is known as CM41, or Gorib, which means ‘the spotted one’ in Central Khoisan languages. His name is particularly apt in this instance, with his dark rosettes in stark contrast to the white snowy surroundings. 
Downloading photos from the camera traps is always a treat, but images like these just make us jump for joy!


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Speaking of leopards in temperate regions, according to Sir Alfred Edward Pease, a British hunter in Africa who wrote the "Book of the lion" (https://archive.org/stream/bookoflion191...4/mode/2up), in the Atlas region of North Africa, the black panther, as in a melanistic version of the Barbary leopard, was a more ferocious and feared man-eater than the Barbary lion, besides being almost as large as it!


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Sir Pease (https://archive.org/stream/bookoflion191...4/mode/2up) read in a French newspaper that an Algerian leopard killed in 1913 measured 8 feet 10 inches (269 cm), and that this was before being skinned. The record set by the Algerian panther is greater than that of an Indian leopard from Bilaspur, which had a weight of 71 kg (157 lbs), height of 34 inches (86 cm) at the shoulder, and length of 8 feet 7 inches (262 cm) from head to tail: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city...227308.cmshttp://www.tribuneindia.com/news/himacha...42548.html

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In Page 100 (https://archive.org/stream/bookoflion191...0/mode/2up), Pease quoted measurements for a Barbary lion from Algeria: 


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Assuming that this Algerian panther was about as large as an Algerian lion (https://archive.org/stream/bookoflion191...4/mode/2up), what we are looking at is a dark, large, powerful and terrifying leopard that was possibly about 95 cm or 1⅜ inches at the shoulder, 8 feet 10 inches (269 cm) from head to tail (longer than how a normal male lion would be between the pegs, as in the length of the body without that of the tail). No wonder people in North Africa would fear a panther like that (https://archive.org/stream/bookoflion191...6/mode/2up)!
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Oman Lycaon Offline
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( This post was last modified: 06-07-2019, 04:05 PM by Lycaon )

@BorneanTiger 

It seems that barbary leopards are quite large. Wonder if any of these "great dark panthers" are still around in the atlas mountains.
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Oman Lycaon Offline
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The rediscovery of the atlas leopard . Sadly this is the only current info I could find.


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