It is hard to guess what a Jungle cat weights. But we have the answer:
An adult Jungle cat (Felis chaus) on average weights 7.16 kg (15.79 lbs).
The Jungle cat is from the family Felidae (genus: Felis). It is usually born with about 136 grams (0.3 lbs). They can live for up to 12 years. When reaching adult age, they grow up to 70.6 cm (2′ 4″). On average, Jungle cats can have babies 2 times per year with a litter size of 2.
As a reference: An average human weights in at 62 kg (137 lbs) and reaches an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). Humans spend 280 days (40 weeks) in the womb of their mother and reach around 75 years of age.
The jungle cat (Felis chaus), also called reed cat and swamp cat, is a medium-sized cat native to the Middle East, South and Southeast Asia and southern China. It inhabits foremost wetlands like swamps, littoral and riparian areas with dense vegetation. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, and is mainly threatened by destruction of wetlands, trapping and poisoning.The jungle cat has a uniformly sandy, reddish-brown or grey fur without spots; melanistic and albino individuals are also known. It is solitary in nature, except during the mating season and mother-kitten families. Adults maintain territories by urine spraying and scent marking. Its preferred prey is small mammals and birds. It hunts by stalking its prey, followed by a sprint or a leap; the ears help in pinpointing the location of prey. Both sexes become sexually mature by the time they are one year old; females enter oestrus from January to March. Mating behaviour is similar to that in the domestic cat: the male pursues the female in oestrus, seizes her by the nape of her neck and mounts her. Gestation lasts nearly two months. Births take place between December and June, though this might vary geographically. Kittens begin to catch their own prey at around six months and leave the mother after eight or nine months.The species was first described by Johann Anton Güldenstädt in 1776 based on a specimen caught in a Caucasian wetland. Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber gave the jungle cat its present binomial name and is therefore generally considered as binomial authority. Three subspecies are recognised at present.
Animals of the same family as a Jungle cat
We found other animals of the Felidae family:
- Jaguarundi bringing 6.88 kilos (15.17 lbs) to the scale
- Cheetah bringing 50.54 kilos (111.42 lbs) to the scale
- Pampas cat bringing 4.4 kilos (9.7 lbs) to the scale
- Snow leopard bringing 32.5 kilos (71.65 lbs) to the scale
- Leopard cat bringing 2.78 kilos (6.13 lbs) to the scale
- Caracal bringing 11.98 kilos (26.41 lbs) to the scale
- Pallas’s cat bringing 3.05 kilos (6.72 lbs) to the scale
- African golden cat bringing 11.29 kilos (24.89 lbs) to the scale
- Leopard bringing 52.4 kilos (115.52 lbs) to the scale
- Flat-headed cat bringing 3.53 kilos (7.78 lbs) to the scale
Animals with the same weight as a Jungle cat
As a comparison, here are some other animals that weight as much as the Felis chaus:
- Olympic marmot with a weight of 6.3 kilos (13.89 lbs)
- Geoffroy’s spider monkey with a weight of 7.6 kilos (16.76 lbs)
- Silvery gibbon with a weight of 5.87 kilos (12.94 lbs)
- Celebes crested macaque with a weight of 7.37 kilos (16.25 lbs)
- Andean mountain cat with a weight of 8.13 kilos (17.92 lbs)
- Short-eared dog with a weight of 8.36 kilos (18.43 lbs)
- Thomas’s langur with a weight of 6.69 kilos (14.75 lbs)
- Yellow-tailed woolly monkey with a weight of 8.23 kilos (18.14 lbs)
- Hairy-nosed otter with a weight of 5.97 kilos (13.16 lbs)
- Black-crested Sumatran langur with a weight of 6.45 kilos (14.22 lbs)
Animals with the same size as a Jungle cat
Not that size really matters, but it makes things comparable. So here are a couple of animals that are as big as Jungle cat:
- Ursine tree-kangaroo with a size of 62.4 cm (2′ 1″)
- Hairy-nosed otter with a size of 76.5 cm (2′ 7″)
- Gray snub-nosed monkey with a size of 70.7 cm (2′ 4″)
- Black-footed mongoose with a size of 61.3 cm (2′ 1″)
- Bush dog with a size of 62.6 cm (2′ 1″)
- Gray fox with a size of 60.3 cm (2′ 0″)
- Bonobo with a size of 75.3 cm (2′ 6″)
- Siamang with a size of 82.4 cm (2′ 9″)
- Red-faced spider monkey with a size of 57.6 cm (1′ 11″)
- Günther’s dik-dik with a size of 61.2 cm (2′ 1″)
Animals with the same litter size as a Jungle cat
Here is a list of animals that have the same number of babies per litter (2) as a Jungle cat:
- Baluchistan pygmy jerboa
- Chisel-toothed kangaroo rat
- Pygmy mouse lemur
- Yellow mongoose
- Rusty-spotted genet
- Buffy-tufted marmoset
- Greater Egyptian jerboa
- North African elephant shrew
- Merriam’s kangaroo rat
- Moncton’s mosaic-tailed rat
Animals with the same life expectancy as a Jungle cat
Completely different animals, but becoming as old as a Jungle cat:
- Pallas’s long-tongued bat with an average maximal age of 10 years
- Long-footed potoroo with an average maximal age of 10 years
- Long-tailed chinchilla with an average maximal age of 11.25 years
- Maned sloth with an average maximal age of 12 years
- Greater fairy armadillo with an average maximal age of 12 years
- Desert rat-kangaroo with an average maximal age of 13 years
- Long-tailed porcupine with an average maximal age of 10.08 years
- Malabar large-spotted civet with an average maximal age of 14 years
- Yellow-spotted rock hyrax with an average maximal age of 14 years
- African wild dog with an average maximal age of 11 years