Caturday felids: Denver Zoo gets smuggled Geoffrey’s cat; caracal gets introduced to household’s other cats; cats being cats; lagniappe

February 24, 2024 • 9:30 am

This link came from reader Stephanie, who added this:

This a tidbit but a cute story that has a more-or-less happy ending (I don’t like zoos or the smuggling of wild animals), but I thought you might be interested.  One of the more unusual aspects of the story is that the cat-smuggling event took place in April 2022, but the story was released in the last few days.  Note that the abbreviation for Denver International Airport is DIA.
The cat at issue is Geoffrey’s cat (Leopardus geoffroyi), my favorite wild felid; it’s about the size of a housecat but spotted, and lives in SE South America. Here’s a picture of Dia, who was rescued from smugglers:
Click the headline below to read, or find the article archived here.

 

An excerpt:

The Denver Zoo’s latest feline resident has been waiting in the wings for more than a year — first smuggled through the Denver International Airport on a commercial flight, then held as evidence in a federal investigation.

In April of 2022, a video went viral when a cat escaped its carrier on a United flight to Denver, reportedly scratching and biting other passengers as it attempted to flee the flight.

What passengers didn’t know is that this wasn’t a regular, domestic cat — it was a wild Geoffroy’s cat and the person transporting it had no idea what they’d gotten themselves into.

Geoffroy’s cats are small, wild cats native to southern and central regions of South America. Although they have a similar size and appearance to domestic cats, they are a wild species and should not be considered a pet, according to a release from the Denver Zoo.

“[The cat] was flying with a person who didn’t know what they had,” said Rebecca McCloskey, carnivore curator at the Denver Zoo. “She wasn’t the owner, just someone who was transporting what she thought was a regular, domestic cat from point A to point B, from a breeder to a buyer.”

McCloskey said the person wasn’t originally scheduled to end their trip in Denver, but she lived in an apartment in the city. After having a difficult and painful flight trying to wrangle the cat, she decided to go home for the night and skipped the connecting flight.

That’s when she called the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services, who reached out to both Colorado Parks and Wildlife and the Denver Zoo for assistance.

Zoo employees, including McCloskey, attempted to help identify the cat through photos, relying on its shorter-than-normal tail, distinct color patterns and white spots on the back of its ears to peg it as a wild Geoffroy’s cat, McCloskey said.

Imagine the commotion when this wild cat got loose! And it was being transported by a “mule” (an unwitting smuggler. Here’s an Instagram picture of the cat after it found a home:

The cat was fondly named Dia after the airport it was smuggled through and a play on the word diabolical from the viral video, McCloskey said.

Together, McCloskey and other zoo and CPW employees worked with U.S. Fish and Wildlife staff to wrangle Dia from the apartment bathroom into a crate, where she was taken to CPW’s wildlife rehabilitation center pending an investigation into her previous owner.

After several months of harboring the wild cat, CPW reached out to the Denver Zoo for assistance in housing Dia while the lengthy investigation dragged on, the zoo stated in a social media post Thursday.

“Dia came to stay with us in December of 2022, but at that point she was still evidence in both a federal and state investigation so we had to keep her under wraps,” McCloskey said.

The zoo’s Animal Health and Care teams immediately jumped into action to make sure Dia had everything she needed at the zoo, including an appropriate diet, expert care and a safe home.

It wasn’t until September 2023 when the case finally resolved and the zoo was able to talk about their newest visitor, now on track for permanent residency.

Now Dia is a lively 7½-pound resident of the zoo, but it’s sad that it has to spend the rest of its life behind bars. Still, it hasn’t lost its spunk:

“She just has the most confidence and the most personality,” McCloskey said, laughing. “At one point during the beginning of her stay with us, she had a room in the tiger house and just came charging up toward the mesh in front of the tiger and began posturing. The tiger backed down and fled to the other side of the room.”

In four days it’s World Geoffrey’s Cat Day:

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From BobCat TV: A caracal (Caracal caracal) gets introduced to the resident Maine Coon cats in a Russian home.

I have two questions: why is it always the Russians who own these exotic cats? And why are the “pet” cats always Maine Coons?

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From Bored Panda, here’s a series of 50 photos of cats being cats. I’ll show a few:

 

Freddie Mercury was of course a huge cat fan:

What a treat!

There are fifty of them at the site, and they’re all good. Go have a look!

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Lagniappe from a Facebook page via Mark. It’s “Norman Catwell” painted by Louise Herrernan (get it on Amazon). How we all see ourselves:

h/t: Jay, Stephanie, Ginger K.

11 thoughts on “Caturday felids: Denver Zoo gets smuggled Geoffrey’s cat; caracal gets introduced to household’s other cats; cats being cats; lagniappe

  1. Imagine if the poem “For I will consider my Cat Jeoffry” was about a Geoffroy’s cat. I think some significant re-writing would be called for!

  2. The Geoffrey’s Cat story is amazing. People must have been terrified to see what they thought was just a house cat on a biting and scratching rampage!

  3. The cat at issue is Geoffrey’s cat (Leopardus geoffroyi), my favorite wild felid.

    I thought your fave was Pallas’s cat (Otocolobus manul). Perhaps it depends on the day. 🙂

  4. I watched that caracal video in amazement. Isn’t it very dangerous to introduce a large wild animal to a couple skittish house cats? I’ve seen cats fight and even a not-particularly-vicious swipe of the paw or nip of the jaws from the caracal could cause some damage — and even more if the terrified pussycat suddenly decided to fight back and it turned into a real battle.

    Yes, when one of the Maine Coons (still plenty smaller than its undomesticated cousin) did lash out, the caracal backed away, but when the Russian woman told “Melissa” “he won’t hurt you” I thought like hell he won’t. Watch your step. It’s not really a pet.

  5. “…she had a room in the tiger house and just came charging up toward the mesh in front of the tiger and began posturing.”

    Do hope that Dia will find lodging near or with someone a bit more to her size.

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