Save
Arabian
Leopards

is a campaign by a group of people from Saudi Arabia to to build political, financial and public support for Arabian Leopards.

Overview

  • cr Status
    Critically Endangered
  • Scientific NameScientific Name
    Panthera pardus nimr
  • Weight Weight
    20-30 kilograms
  • LengthLength
    160-203 centimeters

The Arabian leopard is a leopard subspecies native to the Arabian Peninsula. It is one of the smallest leopard subspecies. It was tentatively affirmed as a distinct subspecies by genetic analysis from a single captive leopard from Israel of south Arabian origin, which appeared most closely related to the African leopard.

Arabian leopards are predominantly nocturnal, but are sometimes also seen in daylight. They seem to concentrate on small to medium prey species, and usually store carcasses of large prey in caves or lairs but not in trees. Scat analyses revealed that the main prey species comprise Arabian gazelle, Nubian ibex, Cape hare, rock hyrax, porcupine, Ethiopian hedgehog, small rodents, birds, and insects. Since local people reduced ungulates to small populations, leopards are forced to alter their diet to smaller prey and livestock such as goats, sheep, donkeys and young camels.

Information about ecology and behaviour of Arabian leopards in the wild is very limited. A leopard from the Judean desert is reported to have come into heat in March. After a gestation period of 13 weeks, females give birth to two to four cubs in a cave amidst boulders or in a burrow.

Leopard cubs are born with closed eyes that open four to nine days later. Captive-born Arabian leopard cubs emerged from their den for the first time at the age of one month. Cubs are weaned at the age of about three months, and remain with their mother for up to two years.

Challenges

Habitat loss due to degradation and fragmentation

Prey depletion caused by unregulated hunting

Trapping for the illegal wildlife trade

Retaliatory killing in defense of livestock

Numbers

Estimates are around 100-200 individuals around the world

Saudi Arabia

Possibly extinct; the potential Arabian leopard population in Saudi Arabia has been calculated at from 60 to 425 individuals based on habitat assessment. The last confirmed record from Saudi Arabia was of two animals poisoned in An Namas in Spring 2007.

UAE

Probably extinct. The latest calculations are at from 10 – 15 individuals with no recent confirmed records.

Oman

Confirmed. Around 30 individuals where camera trapped by the Arabain Leopard Survey.

Yemen

Confirmed. Multiple photographs were collected from campaigns.

Israel/Palestine

Confirmed; up to 8 individuals are known to exist.

Jordan

Extinct; last record 1987.

Egypt (Sinai)

Extinct.

Syria

Extinct.

Lebanon

Extinct.

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