Scientific Classification    

Florida panthers are part of a wide ranging species of cougar like this one
   The Florida panther (Puma concolor coryi) is one of more than 20 subspecies of cougar (Puma concolor). Until 1993, the cougar was classified in the genus Felis along with the domestic cat, the ocelot, and 27 other species. In 1993 the cougar was reassigned to the genus Puma (Wilson and Reeder 1993).

   Concolor means one color. Cougar adults are a uniform tawny color with lighter fur on their lower chests, belly, and inner legs. Shades of individual animals may vary considerably from grayish to reddish to yellowish (Busch 1996). This uniform color conceals them effectively in a variety of settings including the open range.
Naturally Hiding

Notice how the cougar's uniform color conceals them equally well in a forest and on an open hillside

 

   Young and Goldman in their 1946 book The Puma: Mysterious American Cat noted that the color of cougars often matches the color of the deer, their primary prey. Cougar kittens are spotted, which helps to camouflage them in the shadows of their den. These spots fade as they approach maturity at the end of their first year. Cougars have long round tails (nearly two-thirds the length of their head and body). Tails help balance the body, especially during ambush pounces on prey.

   The subspecies name coryi comes from naturalist and hunter Charles Barney Cory who first described the panther as a subspecies of cougar in 1896 in Hunting and Fishing in Florida. He named it Felis concolor floridana, but floridana had already been used for a subspecies of bobcat so scientists changed the name to Felis concolor coryi.


Cougar Subspecies in North America
Cougar Subspecies in South America
subspecies common name
subspecies common name
couguar Eastern cougar concolor Brazilian cougar
schorgeri Wisconsin cougar bangsi Colombian cougar
missoulensis Missoula cougar soderstromi Ecuador cougar
hippolestes Colorado cougar discolor Amazon cougar
oregonensis Oregon cougar incarum Incan cougar
vancouverensis Vancouver Island cougar osgoodi Bolivian cougar
californica California cougar acrocodia Mato Grosso cougar
kaibabensis Kaibab cougar puma Chilean puma
browni Yuma puma cabrerae Argentine puma
improcera Baja California cougar pearsoni Pearson's puma
azteca Mexican cougar patagonica Patagonia puma
stanleyana Texas cougar araucanus Andes puma
coryi Florida panther Source: Busch 1996
mayensis Mayan cougar
costaricensis Costa Rican puma


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