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Only 30 Amur leopards exist in the wild. That’s fewer than the number of kids on a full school bus! |
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Amur Leopard Panthera pardus orientalis Silent, sleek, and strong, Amur leopards are deadly hunters of deep forests. They roam large areas in search of prey. Their long, thick coat and long legs help them survive the cold and deep snow of eastern Asia. What They Eat Where They Live What They Do How They’re Doing ![]() ![]() Animal Bites Where at the Zoo Conservation Status
Habitat Taxonomic Category Where in the World See Also
Amur Leopard
Amur Leopard
Care at the Zoo The Amur leopards’ Zoo diet includes meat and bones. The keepers also periodically offer whole prey such as dead quail. This gives the leopards a chance to consume fur or feathers, as they would in the wild. To enrich the leopards’ lives and help them retain their wild behavior, keepers sometimes give them larger food items such as parts of road-killed deer that they can store and protect from each other. Keepers also may hide food in brush piles, up in trees, or in papier mâché “carcasses” to give the animals a chance to hunt for it. In the wild leopards don’t eat every day, but gorge on the days they make a kill and fast for one or more days afterward. Keepers mimic this pattern by occasionally giving the animals fleshy bones instead of meat. The bones help keep their teeth clean.
Amur Leopard
Amur leopards are on the brink of extinction due to the loss of habitat, loss of prey, and poaching. By 2008 only 30 Amur leopards remained in the wild, isolated in a small (1,000-square-mile) pocket at the tip of Russia’s Pacific coast. The good news? An oil pipeline planned through their remaining habitat has been rerouted. New protections in China have expanded their potential territory, and efforts are underway to restore and protect additional habitat. Someday leopard from zoos may be reintroduced into newly protected habitats. The Minnesota Zoo Foundation, funded by grants and donations, contributes to programs to preserve existing populations and increase habitat in the wild. It also helps manage zoo populations across the United States to maximize the genetic diversity needed to help the animals thrive if and when they are reintroduced into the wild. In 2003, the Minnesota Zoo’s Ulysses S. Seal Conservation Grant Program awarded $2,500 to international efforts to census Amur populations in the wild and determine their viability. In 2007, the program provided funding to purchase camera setups, film, and batteries for a project assessing the suitability of a nature reserve in Russia for a future reintroduction program. The Minnesota Zoo Foundation also contributes $20,000 annually to Amur leopard conservation.
Amur Leopard
Range and Habitat Description Habits and Adaptations Diet Life History
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