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Bazile | 16:14 Sun 16th Oct 2022 | Film, Media & TV
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How does a leopard ( or another predator ) know where the 100 square miles of his territory starts and ends ?
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They scent-mark it with urine, and they rub their cheeks on rocks and trees which emits a unique scent.

Other leopards recognise the scents for what they are, boundary markers.
They know where the fences are. ;o)
When they reach the end of their tether
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So they go around the perimeter of the 100 sq miles scent marking it - really ?

How do they know where 10. 20 , 30 , 50 sq mile point is from point 'a ' in any direction to start with , in the first place ?
I doubt they know that :0) Its we humans that think we know everything. I would think it's an average area that the leopard tends to travel and is seen on fixed cameras.

I do however wonder how they know that 100.000 cubic feet of water falls over Niagara falls per second.
I would think that 100 square miles will be an average area. Have you seen a Leopard use a tape measure?

I would think that they take over an area big enough to allow them to find enough food and they try not to infringe on their neighbour's territory.



Because it's stipulated on the deeds.
Bazile - The measurement is average, some may have less than that, some maybe more, but as advised, they don't measure it.
No, they just roam until they bump into a bigger bloke - and then they scarper back again.
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//Have you seen a Leopard use a tape measure?//

Funny you should ask I ...
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Someone should tell Sir David Attenborough and other wildlife commentators to stop using phrases like
' the leopard has a territory of 100 sq miles ' and instead say ' an estimated ' instead
In all seriousness, that is a vast area. Marvellous really.
I went to see if I could find a youtube video that shows how animals work out their territory and how they share with others. But I found this mega cute one instead

Bazile - People know that Sir David is being approximate, animals don't measure, so no-one expects the area to be accurate.
It can well be narrowed down to what he states Bazile. You have to remember there's been a lot of preservation / conservation going for some number of years now, and with the GPS collar that they fix to a lot of wildlife they can track their movements for many months.
After so long of tracking the collar can be set to release at a given time without any further stress to the animal.
"...animals don't measure, so no-one expects the area to be accurate."

Inch Worm, Yard dog, that one who lives in Hectare's House...
If you think of 100 sq miles as being 10 miles by 10 miles it maybe doesn't seem like such a big area for a leopard to control.
Marking territory is done when pets are wanting to“stake out a claim” to a particular object and to let others know about their claim. Some pets may go to the extreme of urinating to mark a particular area as their own.

but we always really knew this didnt we?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territory_(animal)

more than you ever need or want to know on this.

I have always wondered if the male had to do a round to freshen the marks - Kinda distance and time thing, and it is pretty obvious the distance is gonna be a circle. NOT the most efficient for packing males, a square / rectangle would be.

My dog found a chicken carcass under someone'w wall. and checked every day for 21 d to see if another had miraculously grown there. But this is food seeking rather than marking.

For those who have done and passed 11+ maff ; I suggest an obvious eqn (without tiresome derivation) for a time distance smell relation is :
.
∂2u/∂t2 = c2 ∂2u∂x2 and its solutions. ( 1 dimensional wave equation and er easily extended to two )

I should get out more
humans do the same thing round the borders of the their territory to deter foxes. Perhaps it works better on the Serengeti.

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