Feline
Felinae
Pantherinae
Acinonychinae
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All cats are members of the
family Felidae. The felines are the most strictly carnivorous of all the nine families in the
order to which they belong,
Carnivora. It is thought that the closest relatives of the cats are the other families in their branch of the carnivore evolutionary tree: the
civets,
hyenas, and
mongooses. The first felids emerged during the
Eocene, about 40 million years ago. The most familiar feline is the
Domestic Cat, which first became associated with humans between 7000 and 4000 years ago. Its wild relatives remain in Africa and western Asia to this day, although habitat destruction has restricted their range.
Other well-known members of the cat family include
big cats such as the
Lion,
Tiger,
Leopard,
Jaguar, and
Cheetah (although the Cheetah, despite its size, appears to be descended from the small cats), and other wild cats such as the
lynx,
Puma, and
Bobcat.
Classification
- Subfamily Felinae
- Subfamily Pantherinae
- Subfamily Acinonychinae
Fossil cats
The oldest known felines (Aelurogale, Eofelis) emerged in the Eocene. Better known is Proailurus, which lived in the Oligocene and Miocene eras. During the Miocene it gave way to Pseudaelurus. Pseudaelurus is believed to be the latest common ancestor of the three above-mentioned subfamilies and another subfamily, the Machairodontinae. This group, better known as the sabertooth cats, became extinct in the Pleistocene era. It includes the genera Smilodon, Machairodus, Dinofelis and Homotherium.
References
See also
Felidae is also the title of a novel by Akif Pirincci in which a cat named Francis investigates the murders of several cats in the big city. There are currently 5 books in the Felidae sequel, Felidae, Felidae II (also known as Felidae on the Road), Cave Canem, Das Duell and Salve Roma, of which only the first 2 have been translated to English.