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I think Wikipedia is a wonderful site, and I want to do my bit to help make it even better.
About me
[edit]- I was born in 1983.
- In the summer of 2005 I graduated from the University of Bristol.
- My attempt to be elected treasurer of the University of Bristol Union failed dismally.
- I currently work as an IT technician for a large company who shall remain nameless.
- I am a Pantheist Quaker.
Wikipedia
[edit]- Wikiprojects I am a member of:
- Lists of things that can be done:
- My personal Wikipedia to-do list
- Images I have uploaded (Some are my own, some are found)
The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) is one of the four extant species of lynx, wild cats in the family Felidae. The Iberian lynx is endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, in which it was once widespread, but it is now restricted to a small number of regions in Spain and Portugal, and is listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. Fossils suggest that the species has been present in Iberia since the end of the Early Pleistocene, around one million years ago. The Iberian lynx has a short bright yellowish to tawny coloured spotted fur. Its body is short with long legs and a short tail, and its head is small with tufted ears and a ruff (hairs under the neck). It preys foremost on the European rabbit for the bulk of its diet, supplemented by red-legged partridge, rodents, and to a smaller degree also on wild ungulates. The Iberian lynx marks its territory with its urine, scratch marks on the barks of trees, and scat. The home ranges of adults are stable over many years and both males and females reach sexual maturity at one year old, although they rarely start breeding until a territory becomes vacant. This wild female Iberian lynx was photographed in Almuradiel, in the province of Ciudad Real, Spain.Photograph credit: Diego Delso