Before qualifying I worked in a many jobs including professional photography. Did they survive? Also the online media does peddle a lot of fraudulent stuff which can’t be trusted. You have given me a thought though. Would you like to reconsider?Exhibition species. Do you know if the plan to separate hybrid DNA back into its original species is viable yet?I see that these jaglions aren’t available for research. Also photos of Jahzara are all over Pinterest.

If I remove the photos I will be upset slightly. General anesthesia is very dangerous on big cats. Pinterest and Google have seen to that. Two which have been dismissed by ...'Steamed Bun' is the cute Scottish Fold who desperately wants Wan Xi to play but, no, it ain't gonna happen ...The Scottish is not registered with the premier cat association in the UK but is accepted and registered in America ...For me, and I do have a particular taste embedded in reality and welfare, this video is not helpful to ...The Scottish Fold has been dubbed the "owl cat". I refer to females being fertile which is what Sarah Hartwell would have told me. I wonder about the results. That would be far more positive than removing the photo.

Our jaglions were not bred intentionally. They were the result of an accidental mating which means they were not deliberately bred although the parents were not neutered and they lived together.We are told from my source (but I have now have doubts) that the cat that you see in the picture on this page is the result of a mating between a black male Jaguar, Diablo (as I had guessed) and a lioness whose name was/is Lola. Jaglions. You’re lucky I published your comment. She had abandoned Jahzara when Mary (owner) discovered the cubs and Jazzy wasn’t breathing. Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. On April 9, 2006, two jaglions were born at Bear Creek Wildlife Sanctuary, Barrie (north of Toronto), Ontario, Canada. I should do a page on this provided I can find enough information on the subject.Too bad the human species can’t keep its paws to itself. We are a volunteer … The jaguarundi is different ...I apologise if this is slightly depressing.
I am happy to make a small payment or publicise in a positive way your website and organisation.

Does anyone know if they will send out samples of DNA if requested?I have a neat old animal book with photos from the 1800’s and early 1900’s that show all manner of crossbred critters in zoos–Ligers and Tigons, a Leopard X Lion cross(it had a slight mane and was very squat and blocky) and even a Puma X Leopard cross–apparently all sterile. You’ll receive one email per day and a list of links to the articles written in the past 24 hours. They typically live in prairies, grassy plains, or woodlands. It seems natural to me. Bear Creek does excellent work rehabilitating and re-releasing injured or sick animals into the wild…CHECK YOUR FACTS!Sorry you are horribly wrong. (That’s not to say it hasn’t happened, just that I’m not aware of it.) These two were brought into this world without our assistance.

They would have to be sedated to get blood or tissue samples from them, and as I’ve already said that’s dangerous and we aren’t willing to take any chances with them. You are naturally concerned ...The reason is twofold. I don’t know but I presume that the male Jaguar father was melanistic and the female lion was an ordinary coloured lion.
No I don’t think so. This exotic big cat hybrid should not exist.