Grub
UKC Forum Member
Registered: Jun 2007
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Posts: 59 |
To me there are three ways to determine how a lion measures up. Skull, weight and dimensions. I refer a lot of clients to outfitters. Most have a preconceived idea of what a big cat is. I try to clear up the weight issue by comparing it to net inches of typical whitetail antlers. 150 is better that average and you can count on two hands the number of 200" net typicals. 170 makes book and are about as common in cats as in deer.
Skulls will shrink some, but a lion can be summed up some time later with measurements. Once the cat has been dimantled it can weigh anything a good photo will let you get away with.
Lenght is important but only tells part of the story. Tail lenght on cats vary so much, I only concern myself with the nose to base of tail measurement along with a chest and belly measurement. A good mature tom(5 to 6 years) in most places will be between 53" and 55" long, anything over 56" is very long and 58"+ is pushing 190 net typical.
Mountain lions vary in size greatly from region to region, but Bergmans Rule is in effect. The farther an animal lives from the equator the more body mass it needs to sustain life. This applies in the nothern hemispher as well as the southern. The fact that cold northern climates that produce huge bodied deer also produces huge cats is not a coincidence.
The rule is not always hard and fast as the largest cougar I have ever mounted came from southern Colorado. Eventhough I get some toads from Utah and other western states as well as B.C. a lot of those locations don't allow a cat get the age it needs to reach maximum size.
This is just my some things I have deduced from handling a lot of cats from varios parts of the world.
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