Warning: Not for the delicately natured. Watch at your discretion.
Tells us how adaptable the leopard is to urban environments and another example of the result of habitat destruction.Of course, leopards always preyed on dogs where they could. Poor doggy though.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Tue Jun 25, 2013 11:06 pm
by StampMaster
Surprisingly there is no blood trail.
Thanks for sharing
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Tue Jun 25, 2013 11:10 pm
by Moin.
Whoa ! I had heard of leopard attacks in shanties and huts around the national park, but a plush apt in Mulund !!!
Thanks for sharing Vikram. Have a lot of friends in Mulund, will share it with them.
Regards
Moin.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Tue Jun 25, 2013 11:16 pm
by Safarigent
A sad case of rampant, unregulated and uncontrolled and badly planned extention of human dwellings.
I feel bad for the leopard and many more of its ilk.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 2:37 am
by Hammerhead
In my understanding leopard took the wrong dog ----
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:21 am
by dr.jayakumar
As said human intrusion is the cause.the sanjay gandhi national park is adjacent to mumbai.there where nearly 100 or more attacks recorded.
reason for the attacks being icreasing human population and dumping garbage.
the best long term solution should be ''population control''
regards
dr.jk
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 12:16 pm
by BowMan
That poor creature never knew what came. The leopard is a predator that can manage to creep in total silence in a deciduous jungle and it did not even have to mask its movement on those tiles.
Mumbai walo bachke!!! Mother nature is back with a vengeance...
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 12:42 pm
by Moin.
Thank fully it was a dog and not some one's child. Poor little dog just could'nt offer any resistance, must be a small breed.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Wed Jun 26, 2013 2:23 pm
by ckkalyan
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Thu Jun 27, 2013 12:15 am
by airgun_novice
Moin. wrote:Whoa ! I had heard of leopard attacks in shanties and huts around the national park, but a plush apt in Mulund !!!
Thanks for sharing Vikram. Have a lot of friends in Mulund, will share it with them.
Regards
Moin.
Dear Moin,
A re-look convinced me that it appears to be the lobby of an apartment complex - hence the CCTV. Notice the noticeboard and empty chair near the "security table". The dog appears to be a stray that had adopted the society. Now why was the watchman missing ?
Dear SM/ Bowman,
Tigers/ leopards seldom dig their teeth inside the neck - they more or less knock out all resistance by asphyxiation. Once perched comfortably to have the lunch/ dinner they go "red in tooth n claw". Hence no blood trail. In all probability the dog was pretty much awake - just too scared. I have seen such dogs shiver and shake by mere smell of a leopard at night unable to bark beyond a whimper (though safely inside the house) at our native place in Ratnagiri.
regs
A.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Thu Jun 27, 2013 11:18 am
by BowMan
Tigers/ leopards seldom dig their teeth inside the neck
I agree with your observations but this one. I have seen far too many fang marks on the necks of victims and it makes me wonder how can you so hypothesize. To bring down large prey these cats usually asphyxiate it by clamping their canines on the trachea. That is a little time consuming affair and the animal struggles for a few minutes before it collapses due to lack of oxygen flow. For smaller animals they simply clamp down their fangs on the neck vertebrae and dislodge the columns brining instant paralysis.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Thu Jun 27, 2013 1:09 pm
by airgun_novice
Blood trail smell invites other predators and scavengers. The dog being a stray would not be that heavy. Being scared every possibility that the shock itself would have knocked it out - hence no need for fang penetration. Considering high density of leopard population in that small area, the leopard would first carry the prey up to a higher location (branch) it would be comfortable and able to fend off (from other leopards or wild dogs) and then sink in. Mulund-Thane region has quite a few packs of stray-turned-wild-at night dogs which often venture inside the Krishnagiri Upawan during night to challenge their nemesis or hunt hares. Hence my deduction.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Thu Jul 04, 2013 10:11 pm
by prashantsingh
Wow Vikram.
What a fantastic video.
12 sec. Game over.
A leopard that size could take a much bigger dog .They may look small but they are powerful .
What a versatile animal !!!
A true survivor .
But If it is Mumbai. Two things I am scared of (for the leopard).
Distemper and Rabies.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Thu Jul 04, 2013 10:36 pm
by timmy
The video is a depiction of what makes life go around on this planet: Everything survives by eating some other living thing, except for autotrophs like plants, which can derive their energy from the sun. In essence, animals are like fungi, having to live on something else for survival.
Still, it is chilling to watch, because we can imagine ourselves in the same position as that dog.
My understanding is that the nerves at the base of the housecat's canine teeth enable it to sense the joints between the vertebrae of a mouse's neck, to ensure that their bite severs the spinal cord in one chomp.
Re: Leopard Takes Sleeping Dog on Camera in Mumbai!
Posted: Fri Jul 05, 2013 7:07 pm
by Vikram
Prashantsingh wrote:But If it is Mumbai. Two things I am scared of (for the leopard).
Distemper and Rabies.
And lynching by the people.
timmy wrote:My understanding is that the nerves at the base of the housecat's canine teeth enable it to sense the joints between the vertebrae of a mouse's neck, to ensure that their bite severs the spinal cord in one chomp.