Serval

About Carolina Tiger Rescue

Carolina Tiger Rescue is a 501(c)3 nonprofit wildlife sanctuary whose mission is saving and protecting wild cats in captivity and in the wild.

Carolina Tiger Rescue

1940 Hanks Chapel Rd. Pittsboro, NC 27312 (919) 542-4684 (919) 542-4454 info@carolinatigerrescue.org

Wildlife should be in the Wild

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  • We believe the ideal home for wildlife is in the wild.
  • We believe it is critical to conserve their native habitats.
  • We believe wild animals should not be kept as pets.
  • We believe captive breeding should ONLY be done in accordance with Species Survival plans.
  • We believe all wild animals, both captive and in their native habitats, deserve to be treated with respect and not exploited for entertainment and commercial purposes.

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Tiger at Carolina Tiger Rescue

Public Tours

Twilight Tours

Coming out for a tour is a great way to learn more about the animals that call Carolina Tiger Recue home. We offer many different types of tours.  Public tours are great for adults and families. Twilight tours are for adults only (18 years of age and older). Tiger Tales are a perfect option if you want to bring out really young children. Find the tour that is right for you and enjoy a walk through the sanctuary.

For all tours, tickets must be purchased in advance.

Servals are native to Africa. Their range is in Algeria and south of the Sahara Desert. Servals are known for their long legs, large ears, spotted coats, and short tails. On the back of their large black ears they have distinctive white spots. Servals have the fastest paw strikes of all cats at 1/60 of a second. That is faster than a king cobra can strike. With their exotic looks, they are, unfortunately, big in the pet trade. Many people, however, discover quickly their wild nature cannot be trained of loved out of them. These energetic, feisty cats are predators and not pets.

Lifespan

Servals generally live 10 to 12 years in the wild and can live up to 20 years or more in captivity.

Shape & Size

Servals are between 23 ¼ and 39 inches long. They are between 9 ½ and 18 inches tall and generally weigh between 20 and 40 pounds. Males are typically larger than females. They have long legs and long necks to see over the grasses in the areas in which they live.

Color Pattern

Servals have yellowish fur with dark spots; they resemble a small cheetah. They typically have a black-tipped tail. As with all spotted wild cats, servals have distinctive white spots on the backs of their ears which provide them with a way to communicate with their young. When cats are angry or scared they will often pin their ears to their heads. If kittens are following their mother and can no longer see the white spots on the backs of their mother's ears, then they know to hide because there is probably danger.

Behavior

Servals are primarily solitary, nocturnal animals; the exception is a mother with her kittens. Servals are quite feisty when confronted and will often swat with their quick paws, hiss, growl, and even bark.

Habitat

Servals live in the savanna among the tall grasses near a source of water, like a stream, river, or lake. There have been a few melanistic servals seen in mountainous areas and at higher elevations.

Principal Threats

Servals are threatened by leopards, dogs, and people. Poachers tend to hunt servals and sell their pelts off as cheetah pelts. People also continue to encroach on the servals' habitat.

Leptailurus serval

Range Map

Range

Servals are native to Africa and found primarily south of the Sahara Desert. There is a small population in Tunisia due to reintroduction.

Food

Servals primarily eat rodents and small mammals. They are a keystone species and help keep the rodent population at bay. A single serval can eat between 3,000 and 4,000 rodents in a single year. Servals are sometimes killed by farmers who suspect the servals are killing their livestock. Servals, however, rarely kill livestock and do not often kill animals larger than themselves.

Reproductive Habits

A serval’s gestation period is typically around 72 days. Servals can have between one and five kittens in a litter with the average being two. Serval kittens begin to eat solid food around three weeks of age and are independent by the time they reach six to eight months of age.

Behavior

Servals are primarily solitary, with the exception of a mother and her kittens. Servals are nocturnal cats and have been known to travel up to three or four miles in a single night in search of food or to mark their territory. As with most small cats, when presented with a threat the serval will often retreat. However, if servals are confronting one another or a serval is directly threatened by another predator, it will hiss, arch its back to appear bigger, and take quick swipes with its front legs.

Conservation

Servals are not currently threatened with extinction but CITES Appendix 2 indicates that “that may become so unless trade is closely controlled.”

Fun Facts

  • Servals have the fastest paw strike of any cat at 1/60 of a second, which is faster than a king cobra can strike!
  • Servals use their large ears and exceptional hearing to locate rodents underground!
  • The success rate when servals hunt is about 50%
  • Servals have a high vertical leap, which they use to catch birds; they use their paws in a clapping motion to catch the birds as they start to fly