CatSG

Northern tiger cat

Leopardus tigrinus

IUCN Red List: Vulnerable

Weight: 1.8-3.5 kg
Body length: 38-59 cm
Tail length: 20-42 cm
Longevity: 15-21 years
Litter size: 1-4 cubs, average 1

Description

The tiger cats (Leopardus tigrinus/Leopardus guttulus) are part of the ocelot lineage, one of the youngest of all cat lineages. They pose an exquisite genetic puzzle. They were recently acknowledged as two distinct species, given their genetic differentiation. However, it is likely that the current Central American subspecies, called Leopardus tigrinus oncilla, most likely comprises a different species too. The Costa Rican population and the one of Central and Southern Brazil (now called Leopardus guttulus) have been isolated for approximately 3.7 million years. These two populations show a high level of divergence comparable to the one between species of the Leopardus genus and both populations have a low genetic diversity. To add more genetic oddity for the tiger cat species, there has been ancient historic hybridisation between the pampas cat (L. colocola) and L. tigrinus, intense hybridisation with margays (L. wiedii) and ocelots (L. pardalis) in Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia and Argentina, and ongoing bi-directional hybridisation between L. guttulus with the Geoffroy’s cat (L. geoffroyi). However, there has been no indication of mixing whatsoever between the two former single species. In other words, tiger cats mixed with other species but not between themselves!

Currently two subspecies of the Northern tiger cat are recognised:

  • Leopardus tigrinus tigrinus in northern South America, possibly as south as Bolivia and northern Argentina and
  • Leopardus tigrinus oncilla in Costa Rica and possibly Panama. 

However, further research is needed to establish whether northwestern South American tiger cats are another species L. pardinoides and if the tiger cats from Central America represent a distinct species too. 

The tiger cats are small cats with a slender body, proportioned like a house cat (Brazilian, i.e. slender built, not bulky like European or American house cats). However, whereas some individuals look small and weigh only about 1.8 kg, others are large with a weight of ca. 3.5 kg. Both species present the same body measurements. Males are slightly, but significantly, larger than females. At first glance, the tiger cat species seem to be cryptic. However, they do show some subtle differentiation on ground color, spot pattern, and morphology, which are not easy to tell apart and shows some slight regional variation within the northern species, too. Northern tiger cats from the western part of their range show a darker ground colour varying from dark or orangish brown to yellowish and greyish brown. Their rosettes are medium-sized and tend to form small- to medium-sized oblique bands arranged in scapular inguinal direction. Meanwhile, the northern tiger cats from eastern South America have a lighter ground colour with a spectrum from light yellowish brown to pale yellow and greyish yellow. Their rosettes are smaller, with usually narrow and discontinuous rims and do not coalesce into oblique bands. The ground colour of southern tiger cats (L. guttulus) ranges from dark yellowish brown to ochraceous buff. Their rosettes have thicker, continuous rims, rarely coalescing into smaller oblique bands. On the one hand, the northern tiger cat has a lighter built, often seeming to have a slender body, legs and tail. The southern tiger cat, on the other hand, tends to look slightly bulkier, with a thicker tail and smaller rounder ears. Nevertheless, individuals of both species can diverge from their norm and some do look very cryptic. The paler belly fur is covered with dark spots. The large ears of both species have a black backside with a central white spot. The southern tiger cat’s tail has seven to thirteen irregular, thin rings and a black tip. The northern tiger cat has a less conspicuously, thinly ringed tail. In both species, the tail measures about 60% of the head and body length. Both tiger cats look very similar to the margay (L. wiedii), making it difficult to distinguish the three. However, the tiger cats’ fur is not as thick, its patterns tend to be less dark and blotchy, with abundant solid dot-like spots and open rosettes, which tend to be smaller and more numerous. Moreover, its body is slenderer, its paws proportional to its size and not with a very large appearance, and its tail is shorter than the margay’s tail. In all tiger cats the nape hair slants backwards, differently from both ocelot and margay, but similar to Geoffroy’s cat.

Melanism is common in both species. In Costa Rica, melanism was found to be more common in dense forests than in more open habitats.

 

Other names

Language/Country

Name

Brazil

gato-do-mato, maracajá-í, pintadinho, gato-macambira, gato-maracajá

Colombia

tigrillo perludo, tigre gallinero

Costa Rica

caucél

Ecuador

tigrillo chico

English

tiger cat, little spotted cat

French

chat tigre, oncille

French Guiana

chat tigre tacheté, chat tig

German

Onzille, Kleinfleckenkatze, Ozelotkatze, Zwergtigerkatze

Guyana

chivi 

Peru

chivi

Spanish

tigrillo, tirica, gato tigre

Surinam

ocelot-cat, tigrikati

Venezuela

tigrato

Status and Distribution

The northern tiger cat is classified as Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List. In Colombia and Ecuador, it is listed as Vulnerable too. In the whole of Brazil, the species is listed as Endangered, and in the state of Bahia, Brazil, as Vulnerable. Brazil is the main range country for both the northern and southern tiger cat.

The northern tiger cat is considered as widespread but to be rare everywhere. Recently, the first density estimates from camera trapping were established in the Brazilian Cerrado. In the state of Minas Gerais, densities of 4.5 individuals per 100 km² at the Porto Cajueiro Private Reserve and 9.1 individuals per 100 km² at the Grande Sertão Veredas National Park. For two sites in Mirador State Park in the state of Maranhõ, SECR estimates were 8.68 ± 3.9 (3.75–20.1) individuals per 100 km² and 11.3 ± 5 (5.0–25.5) individuals per 100 km², respectively. This results in an estimated population size of 287 (127–661) individuals in Mirador State Park, and with extrapolation to a possible population some 700 individuals in the protected areas of the northern savannas, and of 2,000–3,000 individuals in the states of Maranhão, Tocantins, Piauí and Bahia. In all the aforementioned study sites, ocelots were present, but rare.

Before those density estimate from camera trapping, densities were largely estimated based on few home range estimates. Population densities in the Cerrado and Caatinga in Brazil were estimated at 1–5/100 km². The northern tiger cat is negatively affected by the ocelot and occurs mainly outside of protected areas. Where the ocelot is not present it is thought to reach densities of 5–20 individuals per 100 km². In some areas declines of 10–40% were estimated. The global population was estimated at 8,932 to 10,208 adult individuals.

The distribution range of the northern tiger cat expands from Costa Rica and Panama in Central America into South America up to Central Brazil. Its southern limits are not yet well known, as well as the extent of a possible overlap with the populations of the southern tiger cat. Its distribution in the Amazon basin is possibly patchy and not continuous. The northern tiger cat is absent from the Darien Peninsula connecting Central and South America, as well as from the Llanos of Venezuela, and the Paraguayan Chaco. In Colombia, it is found along the three Andean mountain chains, but there are no confirmed records in the northern portion of its distribution in Colombia. From Ecuador and Peru, only few museum specimens exist and only in 2000 the species was formally confirmed in Bolivia through live-trapping. 

Extant distribution area of the Northern tiger cat (IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016).

Habitat

The northern tiger cat lives in a wide range of habitats. These include tropical and subtropical rainforest, deciduous/semi-deciduous, montane and premontane forests, semiarid thorny scrub, savannah and wet/swampy savannah. In Central and northwestern South America, the northern tiger cat is mainly associated with montane cloud forests, where it is usually found at higher elevations than the ocelot and margay. The northern tiger cat occurs up to an elevation of 3,000 m, occasionally above. In Colombia, it seems to be restricted to elevations above 1,500 m but has been recorded up to 4,800 m. Most records in Costa Rica come from the forests along the flanks of volcanos at elevations from 1,000 m up to the tree line where it inhabits cloud and elfin forests. On the other hand, in Brazil it mainly occurs in the lowlands below 500 m and is commonly associated with savannah, semiarid scrub, as well as forests. Even though it is found in Amazonian rainforests, to what degree the northern tiger cat uses it is not clear and needs further investigation. It can be found in disturbed habitats, even close to human settlements, as long as there is natural cover and prey base. In Antioquia, Colombia, tiger cats were also recorded within cypress and pine plantations. Nonetheless in the Caatinga drylands of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil, northern tiger cats were more likely to be found away from rural settlements and in areas with a higher proportion of woody vegetation. In Manu National Park, Peru, northern tiger cats’ probability of presence decreased with increasing distance to the park.

Ecology and Behaviour

The tiger cat is a solitary felid. It is active predominantly at night, but can also show varying degrees of crepuscular and diurnal activity. In Costa Rica, melantistic northern tiger cats were found to be more diurnal than non-melanistic ones. Melanistic individuals benefit from better camouflage in dense forest under brighter conditions than non-melanistic ones. Generally, diurnal activity is suggested to be a strategy to avoid predation by the larger sympatric ocelot. In areas where ocelots occur, both northern and southern tiger cats, as well as the margay and jaguarundi, tend to be rare because of potential intra-guild predation/competition. This negative impact of the ocelot on smaller cat species is called the “ocelot effect”. Thus, tiger cat numbers are negatively impacted by the larger ocelot by interspecific killing due to potential for competition. On the other hand, tiger cat numbers are not affected by those of the margay and jaguarundi, which are, in fact, more potential competitors than the much larger ocelot.

Northern tiger cat population densities vary but are supposed to be very low throughout most of its range, especially in regard to what would be expected of such a small cat species. Given its size, expected density would be 91 individuals per 100 km². However, generally the northern tiger cat occurs at densities of 1–5/100 km², and only in very few and highly localized areas, where ocelots are absent or rare, they could reach densities of up to 15–25/100 km². In the Amazon, usually the safeguard region for the tropical American felids, the northern tiger cat occurs at an exceedingly low density of perhaps only 0.01 individuals per 100 km². There is evidence that it is also naturally rare and elusive in Central America, as it is in some areas of Brazil. Maybe due to the “ocelot effect” it is mostly found outside protected areas, and does not seem to attain effective population size for long-term persistence in any Conservation Unit.

Tiger cats are excellent climbers, but spend most of their time on the ground as most of its prey is terrestrial. Small prey is killed with a nape bite, but larger prey tends to be attacked first on the back. Feeding starts on the head or neck. When threatened, tiger cats show an aggressive behaviour with arched back and raised hair, besides showing the teeth and producing a “whistling-spiting” vocalization. It seems that both species of tiger cats present very similar habits, which makes it still hard to set them apart ecologically.

Home ranges of the tiger cats are 2.5 times larger than they would be expected, based on the cat’s body size. This may be another consequence to avoid larger and potential felid predators. Very few studies on home ranges have been conducted. Home ranges for the northern tiger cat ranges from 1 to 17.1 km². Female ranges are smaller than the one of males.

The following information about reproduction found in the literature stems from captive individuals and was published before the splitting of L. tigrinus and L. guttulus. Thus it cannot be attributed with certainty to one or the other species and is presented identically for both: Very little information about the tiger cat’s reproduction is available. Reproduction occurs year-round, but could show different peaks in different areas. Oestrus lasts on average for 2.5 (1–6) days, and the mean interoestrous interval is 14.2 (10–26) days. The gestation period lasts for 71–78 days, after which 1–4 cubs are born, but on average 1.12. The eyes are open at 8–17 days. Weaning occurs at two to three months and young are almost about adult body size at 11 months of age. However, sexual maturity is achieved only at about 2–2.5 years, which is rather very late for a felid of this size. The lifetime number of young potentially produced by a seven year old female tiger cat in the wild is generally up to five. This shows a very low reproductive potential, considering its small size and especially compared to other felids from other continents.

Prey

The northern tiger cat's diet is still very poorly studied, but is known to be based on small mammals (< 100 g), birds and reptiles (especially lizards). Stomach contents from specimens from Costa Rica and Venezuela included mostly small rodents. Conversely, in the semi-arid Caatinga scrub of northeastern Brazil, the diet comprised 28 items. In this area, mean prey mass was around 55 g. The main part consisted of lizards, but also including significant amounts of birds and some small rodents. Thus, it is suggestive that this small felid is a generalist predator, taking advantage of the most readily available resources in the area. Nevertheless, in the Boqueirão da Onça region, northern Bahia, Brazil, northern tiger cat occupancy was positively correlated with rock cavy (Kerodon rupestris) occupancy. It was speculated that the cavy’s preferential use of rocky outcrops made encounters more predictable and enabled the tiger cats to maximise foraging efficiency.

Main Threats

The main threats to the northern tiger cat are habitat loss and fragmentation due to deforestation and persecution by humans. The cloud forests in Colombia, for example, are being replaced by coffee or eucalyptus plantations, and the Brazilian Cerrado is being converted for grains. Loss of natural cover in the Brazilian Cerrado and Caatinga reaches 55% and 30–50%, respectively. This would thus imply an equivalent reduction in the species’ extent of occurrence. As the tiger cat shows low densities in protected areas and populations are fragmented, it is even more vulnerable to habitat conversion. Further threats are killing due to poultry depredation, and road mortality.

Free-ranging domestic dogs can occur even in protected areas and pose further threats to the northern tiger cats. On the one hand, they are predatory competitors and may even predate directly on the northern tiger cat. On the other hand, domestic dogs are disease vectors e.g. for Parvovirus and Canine Distemper Virus. However, the impact of the diseases on northern tiger cat populations is yet unknown.

Historical trade on tiger cats (which would include both species) from 1976 to 1985 consisted of astonishing 352,508 skins, which would represent about 28% of all trade on Neotropical felids in that period, second only to Geoffroy’s cat. Although the international trade in furs has been heavily reduced, illegal hunting and capturing still takes place, mostly for the local market. Local communities have a variety of uses for the northern tiger cat: In Peru, trade has been identified both for furs and as pets. In Ecuador it is also used as pet, but for food, too. In the Caatinga, northeastern Brazil, northern tiger cats are used as bushmeat, for medicine, for magical/religious ceremonies, as pets and for ornamental purposes.

Models predict 86.2% range reduction from climate change by 2050 for the northern tiger cat.

Another problem is the lack of knowledge of this cat species. Very little information is available about the northern tiger cat’s ecology and status making it difficult to assess threats and their impact.

Conservation Efforts and Protection Status

The tiger cat is included in the Appendix I of CITES since 1989 and is protected over part of its range. Hunting is prohibited in Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, French Guiana, Suriname and Venezuela, but it is not legally protected in Ecuador, Guyana, Nicaragua, Panama and Peru.

As the northern tiger cat, when present, occurs in extremely low numbers in the Amazon Basin reserves or other protected areas, such areas do not represent a safeguard for this species as they do for other felids. Also, this felid is probably most frequent outside protected areas, where its habitat is undergoing high rates of destruction. Thus, conservation efforts should be focused on the areas outside protected areas. The area with the highest potential for maintaining the largest population of the northern tiger cat is the conservation complex around Nascentes do Rio Parnaíba National Park (Brazil) in the northern savannas. However, there is still no hard evidence for that, only a prediction based on area size and tiger cat’s density. Still, numbers are expected to vary only from 750 to 2,250 individuals.

Further research on both species of the tiger cat’s ecology, natural history and threats is urgently needed. To reassess its taxonomy is a research priority as the northern tiger cat might possibly be divided into two separate species.