Bobcat
no
Felis domestica is a taxonomic species within the Felis genus. This is an invalid taxonomic name for the domestic cat. The correct name for the domestic cat is Felis catus.
The most common male cat name is Max. The most common female cat name is Molly. Molly? Weird, it seem to be more human the cat. But my research proves it.
The genus IS Felis. The whole classification is: Kingdom - Animalia; Phylum - Chordata; Class - Mammalia; Order - Carnivora; Suborder - Feliformia; Family - Felidae; Subfamily - Felinae; Genus - Felis. The species below the genus Felis get a little fuzzy - with Felis sylvestris catus being the consensus, but with some usage (archaic, I think) of Felis domesticatus or Felis domesticus catus, and Felis catus ('catus' being italicized). [SEE LINK: > re: where, why, and why not domesticated animals should have that status explicit in the scientific nomenclature of a species. Do multi-generation feral cats lose the nomenclature for being a domesticated species, for example?] The link concludes: "*ANY* designation of a domesticated species is theoretically incorrect..."
Felis leo, also known as the lion, is most closely related to other big cats in the Panthera genus such as tigers, leopards, and jaguars. They all share a common ancestor and are part of the Felidae family.
Bobcat
no
The term Felis concolor is obsolete and the animal is now called Puma concolor with the genus being Puma.
Take your pick: mountain lion, puma, painter, cougar.
Felis concolor is the species of the puma.
No, Felis concolor and Puma concolor both refer to the same species, known as the cougar, puma, or mountain lion. The scientific name Puma concolor is more commonly used today to classify this large felid species.
felis concolorPuma concolor
yygtyr
felis concolor
The eastern cougar or eastern puma (Puma concolor couguar) is the name given to the extirpated cougars that once lived in northeastern North America. They were declared extinct in 2011.
While felids in general are surprisingly cross-fertile, Felis concolor (various common names including puma, cougar,mountain lion, and panther) is far too large to successfully mate with Felis silvestris (the domestic house cat); Pumas are much more likely to regard a housecat as prey than as a viable mate.
The scientific name Felis concolor refers to the species of animal commonly known as the mountain lion or cougar. "Felis" is the genus name for wild cats, and "concolor" means "uniform in color," describing the cougar's generally tan or brown fur.