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Post by brobear on Mar 26, 2017 9:19:14 GMT -5
www.lankalibrary.com/wlife/slothbear.htmThe bear took no notice of him, but kept sniffing the air and following the drag-mark made by the leopard earlier on, which meant he was not taking the most direct path to kill. The leopard sped towards the bear, belly to the ground, making low snarling, hissing sounds. The bear did not relent however, even as the big cat sprang at him thus three more times. Outdone, and in no mood for a fight, the leopard retreated to a small hollow in the thorny scrub. The bear did not bother to pursue him. The confrontation had been a noisy one, but with absolutely no physical contact. The bear then opened up the calf's stomach and began sucking on the gory juices. Then, using his paw, he tore out the intestines and ate them. Next, while holding down the carcass with one paw, he opened out the young buffalo's chest with a single sweep of the other paw and fed on the heart and lungs, sucking up all the blood in the cavity. It was interesting to note that he did not eat any of the 'flesh' (muscle). After feeding for about an hour and a half, the bear sat down patiently, cleaned his paws and face, rolled on the sandy road, and then ambled off in the same direction from whence he had come. Some minutes after his departure, the leopard came out of the thicket and started feeding. We left him to his meal.
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Post by brobear on Mar 26, 2017 9:24:49 GMT -5
shaggygod.proboards.com/board/38/felidae Encounters between sloth bears and leopards are rare, often occurring in the evening at and around kill sites. In 1968, Kurt and Jayasuriya report of a sloth bear eaten by a leopard at Yala National Park, India. The details? The bear victim was either a young adult or sub adult female sloth bear described as three-quarter grown. The encounter occurred by a palu tree but whether the leopard was hunting the bear or if the meeting was a chance encounter is unclear. The authors stated the park staff were have to recorded only one other meeting between these two species in Yala National Park where a leopard was killed by a bear. The seriously injured bear was later destroyed by park officials. No other details of the encounter were provided. Kurt, F. and Jayasuriya, A. (1968). Notes on a dead bear. Loris, 11: 182-183.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 16, 2018 20:55:27 GMT -5
I think a american black bear will beat a jaguar will at least 6/10 times due to a weight advantage. Let me know what you guys think.
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Post by brobear on Sept 17, 2018 3:15:26 GMT -5
In an ambush attack; probably the jaguar. In a face-off, I'd bet on the bear.
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Post by King Kodiak on Sept 17, 2018 4:19:53 GMT -5
Black bear takes it at least 6/10 for sure.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 17, 2018 7:49:49 GMT -5
I agree with you brobear and kodiak. I think the bear will take this one home.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 21, 2018 7:01:11 GMT -5
The bear being a hundred pounds heavier will win most times. At parity, my vote still goes to the bear slightly.
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Post by brobear on Dec 29, 2018 8:06:54 GMT -5
These guys are bound to know each other. Face-to-face with a leopard, my nickel is on the 300 pound panda bear. I believe that his looks and his habits are deceiving. I haven't checked this out, but according to head-and-body length, this just might be a fair fight.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2018 8:08:50 GMT -5
I support the larger panda too.
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Post by King Kodiak on Dec 29, 2018 8:15:28 GMT -5
Panda bears are known to fend off snow leopards, but they are not much of a fighter. There are no accounts of Pandas killing anything. But snow leopards max weight is about 165 lb, giant panda max weight is 350 lbs, at max weights, the panda should win.
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Post by brobear on Dec 29, 2018 8:23:30 GMT -5
wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/endangered_species/giant_panda/panda/kung_fu_panda_enemies_defences/ A fully grown panda is far too formidable a foe for most predators, but some animals can prey on cubs. Potential predators include jackals, snow leopards and yellow-throated martens, all of which are capable of killing and eating panda cubs. Indeed, the 2008 animated blockbuster Kung Fu Panda tells the story of Po, a panda who is an apprentice noodle-maker and kung-fu fanatic, and whose greatest enemy is Tai Lung: a fierce kung-fu fighting snow leopard. In real life, snow leopards, which are also endangered, share some of the same habitats as the black and white bears and pose a threat to young pandas. *Note: I thought that actual leopards lived in China. Not my first mistake.
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Post by brobear on Jan 3, 2019 5:14:45 GMT -5
Don't confuse adult bears with cubs. Snow leopards prey on panda bear cubs. Which they ambush.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jan 3, 2019 5:29:12 GMT -5
Don't confuse adult bears with cubs. Snow leopards prey on panda bear cubs. Which they ambush. We are in the year 2019 and still most cat fans are still getting confused, they still dont see the huge difference between “ambush hunting” and “face to face fighting” some day they will learn. Thats the only way a cat wins, by ambush, big accomplishment.
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Post by Kamchatka on Jan 3, 2019 21:54:27 GMT -5
Yes of course it is big accomplishment!
To outwit wily bear-mother and take her cub is truly a skilled feat.
Stealthy cat must sneak up downwind remaining unseen, then strike fast.
Only if cub is quickly killed, or bear-mother fears for her own life, will assassin cat succeed in gaining choicest milk-fed meat bundle.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jan 3, 2019 22:31:21 GMT -5
Zero accomplishment. Yeah i can also kill Bruce lee if i attack him from behind with short knives (claws). Zero accomplishment.
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Post by Kamchatka on Jan 4, 2019 0:47:53 GMT -5
Hahaha no way.
Lee would smell your fear!
He is not fat lazy bamboo bear.
You are only amateur, no good at sneaking up.
Assassin ounce is like Spetsnaz, so juicy cub is dead meat.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jan 4, 2019 4:01:36 GMT -5
I still dont see any account of your kitty beating a panda head on, not even a cub, ha ha ha. The coward needs an ambush.
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Post by brobear on Jan 4, 2019 4:53:47 GMT -5
I have discovered no record of any cat ever killing a mature panda bear.
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Post by Polar on Jan 4, 2019 12:04:56 GMT -5
Panda bear would easily win. Come on (lol), a 250-pound ursine vs a feline half its weight? Why is this topic even here.
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Post by King Kodiak on Jan 4, 2019 14:58:07 GMT -5
Panda bear would easily win. Come on (lol), a 250-pound ursine vs a feline half its weight? Why is this topic even here. No match bro. Panda wins, we all agree. As for the topic, just check out Carnivora forum, now thats funny, lmao.
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