Felis lybica was the
scientific name proposed in 1780 by
Georg Forster who based his
description on a specimen from
Gafsa on the
Barbary Coast that had the size of a domestic cat, but a reddish fur, short black tufts on the ears, and a ringed tail. Between the late 18th and 20th centuries, several naturalists and curators of
natural history museums described and proposed new names for wildcat
holotypes from Africa and the Near East, including: •
Felis ocreata by
Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1791 was based on a description of a wildcat encountered in northern Ethiopia by
James Bruce. •
Felis cafra by
Anselme Gaëtan Desmarest in 1822 was based on two wildcat skins from South Africa's
Eastern Cape. •
Felis ocreata mellandi by Harold Schwann in 1904 was based on two wildcat skins from northeastern
Rhodesia in the collection of the
Natural History Museum, London. •
Felis ocreata rubida also by Schwann in 1904 was a skull and a fulvous skin of a male wildcat from
Belgian Congo. •
Felis ocreata taitae by
Edmund Heller in 1913 was a skull and a light-coloured skin of a female wildcat from
Voi in southeastern
Kenya. •
Felis ocreata iraki by
Robert Ernest Cheesman in 1920 was a dove grey wildcat skin with salmon buff shading from
Kuwait and another similar coloured specimen from the
Tigris River. •
Felis haussa by
Oldfield Thomas and
Martin Hinton in 1921 was a skull and a sandy-coloured skin of a male wildcat from the
Aïr Mountains south of
Zinder. •
Felis ocreata griselda and
F. o. namaquana by Oldfield Thomas in 1926 was a pale wildcat skin from south of
Benguela in
Angola and another pale wildcat skin from
Namaqualand in
Namibia. •
Felis lybica pyrrhus by
Reginald Innes Pocock in 1944 was a series of ten greyish brown wildcat skins from Benguela. •
Felis lybica tristrami also by Pocock in 1944 was a pale buffy white skin of an adult female wildcat from the
Palestinian Moab area. •
Felis lybica lowei,
F. l. lynesi,
F. l. foxi and
F. l. brockmani also by Pocock in 1944 was a pale skin of an adult female wildcat from
Marrah Mountains in the
Darfur desert, a very pale skin of a male wildcat from north of
Al-Fashir in Darfur, a dark skin of a male wildcat from
Bauchi State in northern
Nigeria, and a pale brown skin of a young adult male wildcat from the
Golis Mountains in northern
Somalia, respectively. Since 2017, three African wildcat subspecies are recognised as
valid taxa: •
F. l. lybica, the
nominate subspecies in North Africa and Sinai to Sudan •
Southern African wildcat (
F. l. cafra) in Southern Africa •
Asiatic wildcat (
F. l. ornata) in Asia
Phylogeny Phylogenetic analysis of the
nuclear DNA in tissue samples from all Felidae species revealed that the
evolutionary radiation of the Felidae began in Asia in the
Miocene around . Analysis of
mitochondrial DNA of all Felidae species indicates a radiation at around . The African wildcat is part of an
evolutionary
lineage that is estimated to have
genetically diverged from the
common ancestor of the
Felis species around , based on analysis of their nuclear DNA. About 10,000 years ago, some African wildcats were
tamed in the
Fertile Crescent, becoming the ancestors of the domestic cat. Domestic cats are derived from at least five "
Mitochondrial Eves". In
Cyprus, an African wildcat was found in a burial site next to a human skeleton in the
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B settlement
Shillourokambos. The graves are estimated to have been established by
Neolithic farmers about 9,500 years ago, and are the earliest known evidence for a close association between a cat and a human. Their proximity indicates that the cat may have been tamed or
domesticated. Results of genetic research indicate that the African wildcat
genetically diverged into three
clades about 173,000 years ago, namely the Near Eastern wildcat,
Southern African wildcat and
Asiatic wildcat. African wildcats were first domesticated about 10,000 years ago in the
Near East, and are the ancestors of the
domestic cat (
F. catus). Domestic cats and African wildcats remain closely related in the present day;
interspecific hybrids between domestic cat and African wildcats are common, and occur where their ranges overlap. |1= |2=European wildcat }} |2=Chinese mountain cat }} |2=Sand cat }} }} }} }} }} ==Characteristics==