Pallas’s cat: One of the world’s oldest felines that stands on its bushy tail to keep its paws warm

QUICK FACTS

Name: Pallas’s cat (Otocolobus manul)

Where it lives: Steppes and high-elevation grasslands in Central Asia, particularly Mongolia and China

What it eats: Small rodents, including gerbils, hamsters and pikas, small lizards and birds

Pallas’s cat, also known as a manul, is a feline from Central Asia that yelps like a small dog and has such short legs that it sometimes struggles to run after prey. Researchers think it is one of the oldest living cat species in the world, having diverged 5.2 million years ago from a leopard ancestor.

Although it looks stocky, Pallas’s cat isn’t actually much bigger than a domestic cat beneath its long, dense fur. This thick coat provides insulation against its environment, the freezing cold of Central Asia’s steppe and high-altitude grassland ecosystems. The species is rarely seen because it is solitary and very secretive, spending the daytime in rock crevices and marmot burrows.


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