Bobcat
Lynx rufus
The bobcat (Lynx rufus) is a medium-sized wild cat native across much of North America, from forests and swamps to deserts, farmland edges, and rocky hills. It has a short bobbed tail, tufted ears, spotted coat, ruff of facial fur, and longer hind legs that help it spring after prey. Rabbits and hares are common foods, but bobcats also take rodents, birds, reptiles, and occasional deer fawns. Its tracks and scat are often the first signs people notice because the animal itself is secretive.
Bobcats are managed as wildlife, rehabilitation cases, education animals, or sanctuary residents, not house pets. Keeping one legally usually requires permits and secure facilities, and tame-looking hand-raised animals still retain strong predatory behavior. Rehabilitators need low-contact housing, whole-prey diets, and release sites with suitable cover and prey. Around farms and suburbs, practical conflict prevention means securing poultry, removing attractants, and avoiding feeding wildlife. Biologists use harvest data, trail cameras, roadkill records, and collar studies to understand local populations.
Colors: Gray with Black Spots, Reddish with Black Spots, Tan with Black Spots