Black curassow

A panther feline is about the size of a homegrown feline, yet more thin, with longer legs and distinct networks between its toes. Its little head is set apart with two noticeable dull stripes and a short and limited white gag. There are two dim stripes running from the eyes to the ears and more modest white streaks running from the eyes to the nose. The backs of its respectably long and adjusted ears are dark with focal white spots. Body and appendages are set apart with dark spots of shifting size and shading, and along its back are two to four columns of prolonged spots. The tail is about a large portion of the size of its head-body length and is spotted with a couple of indistinguishable rings close to the dark tip. The foundation shade of the spotted hide is brownish, with a white chest and gut. Notwithstanding, in their enormous reach, they shift such a huge amount in colouration and size of spots just as in body size and weight that at first they were believed to be a few distinct animal varieties. The hide tone is yellowish brown in the southern populaces, however pale silver-dark in the northern ones. The dark markings might be spotted, rosetted, or may even frame specked streaks, contingent upon subspecies. In the jungles, panther felines weigh 0.55–3.8 kg (1.2–8.4 lb), have head-body lengths of 38.8–66 cm (15.3–26.0 in), with long 17.2–31 cm (6.8–12.2 in) tails. In northern China and Siberia, they weigh up to 7.1 kg (16 lb), and have head-body lengths of up to 75 cm (30 in); for the most part, they put on weight before winter and become more slender until spring.[5] Shoulder tallness is around 41 cm (16 in).[citation needed]
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