Big Cat Hunting behaviour
Posted: Tue Mar 27, 2012 7:45 pm
Just thought I'd make mention of an interesting point..
It appears that when Big Cats or eyeing up a kill, they usually go for what looks like the smaller or weaker / most vulnerable of the group... some of them also use a technique when hunting which is some will bolt suddenly into the herd to seperate the herd whilst some outsider(s) Big Cat(s) single out one who is far apart from the rest & take it down...
They are prone to hunting sole bodies, ie. they find a loner roaming in the bush who has become seperated from its herd for one reason or the other & take it down. Easy target when the loner has lost one of its best weapons: safety in numbers.
Just makes you wonder if any of the people who have gone missing in the bush fell under this category.. out alone lost & confused, weak & without a group of people with them ... & how a Big Cat might see it, without its herd.
I would think that these predators through survival of the fittest, have a built in instinctive tool to recognize the hungry, weak, afraid, lost dehydrated, disorientated etc. And what better if the person is alone without their 'herd' to protect.
One would think a Big Cat would find a lost person in the bush & instantly see it as an easy target/ easy feed. Scary or as sad or sickening as that sounds.. it may be the case.
It may also be why they 'haven't been known to take anyone yet'...
Because they simply haven't been game enough to take anyone in residential areas where they would know the rest of the 'herd' is?
Moral to the story is, in case the above should be correct, don' get lost in the bush alone & always carry pepper spray just in case!
It appears that when Big Cats or eyeing up a kill, they usually go for what looks like the smaller or weaker / most vulnerable of the group... some of them also use a technique when hunting which is some will bolt suddenly into the herd to seperate the herd whilst some outsider(s) Big Cat(s) single out one who is far apart from the rest & take it down...
They are prone to hunting sole bodies, ie. they find a loner roaming in the bush who has become seperated from its herd for one reason or the other & take it down. Easy target when the loner has lost one of its best weapons: safety in numbers.
Just makes you wonder if any of the people who have gone missing in the bush fell under this category.. out alone lost & confused, weak & without a group of people with them ... & how a Big Cat might see it, without its herd.
I would think that these predators through survival of the fittest, have a built in instinctive tool to recognize the hungry, weak, afraid, lost dehydrated, disorientated etc. And what better if the person is alone without their 'herd' to protect.
One would think a Big Cat would find a lost person in the bush & instantly see it as an easy target/ easy feed. Scary or as sad or sickening as that sounds.. it may be the case.
It may also be why they 'haven't been known to take anyone yet'...
Because they simply haven't been game enough to take anyone in residential areas where they would know the rest of the 'herd' is?
Moral to the story is, in case the above should be correct, don' get lost in the bush alone & always carry pepper spray just in case!