Quote:
Thanks for the series of photos put together!
Folks - look at the pictures:
1 & 2 - if you ignore the tail and they look like the exact same animal. Skinny legs, white underbelly all the way up to the jaw, white of the inside of the ear, sleak body (photo #2 looks well fed!
)
1 & 3 - look at the heaviness of the body and thickness of the legs, the cougar is also alot less dramatic in coloring, the belly is lighter in color but not a distinct line
I've been lurking on this thread... very interesting discussions. I'm thinking wyoDreamer has it right... I had the same observations when I looked at these 3 images together. 1&2 same color pattern, same leg construction. the leaf blockin the snout in the first photo and giving an artificially cropped view of the face, and the tail with it's visual narrowness and feline curve at the end, combine to give a "cat" impression.
I share wyoDreamer's observations on 1&3 as well... color pattern is *not* a good match, leg construction not so well matched either.
I'm an artist and I try to get both realistic representations, and realistic impressions, of the animals I portray. there's a big difference... in a realistic representation, what I draw or paint looks *precisely* like the animal it is. in a realistic impression, you *know* what animal it is, without a doubt, but it does not look precisely like that animal. in a sense, it is an abstraction of that animal, or if you like, it gives the feeling of that animal, without looking photo-real, or even graphically accurate.
this distinction matters, because most folks don't really *see* what they think they see. they see something, and their brain tries to match it against information that's already in their head... a selection is made... the best fit for what they see, and then whatever they *matched* to is what they "saw". it's why eye-witness testimoney can be wildly unreliable, and why magic tricks are so convincing. we do not SEE accurately because we are INTERPRETING what we see in light of what we KNOW or EXPECT.
while there's a *lot* of natural art talent in my family, I didn't get any of it. I've *learned* to be a good artist by really understanding two things: how to place a line on paper accurately, and more important, how to *REALLY* see what I'm looking at.
so how this applies... in really looking at a thing, sometimes you have to take it in smaller parts to really see what's there. if the object as a whole gives an impression, it can be very hard to really observe the details. in this case, the artificially shortened face (because of the blocking leaf), and the cat-positioned tail give a very "cat" impression, and it can be hard to get past that. but it you start to look at the parts individually, a different story becomes clear.
this is a detailed analysis of the images, so it's a bit long. appologies for the length of this post, but that's what detailed analysis takes. if you want to play along, open each of the three images in a separate browser window, shrink the window down to a quarter the size of the image and zoom in on them until you can only see one part of the animal at a time... try to get the body part the same size in each of the three windows. if you zoom too much, you'll start to lose the ability to differentiate animal from background, so find a size you can still see moderately clearly.
zoom in on the animal's ribs behind it's foreleg in each photo... 1&2 have the same color pattern, light underneath, with a clearly defined color line and darker above. also notice that the white rises above and behind the elbow onto the ribs showing a clear demarkation between the body and the leg. 3 does not have the clear color shift, and while there's a small amount of white behind the elbow, it does not clearly set off the separation of leg and body, or rise as high and as far forward as it does in the first two.
zoom in on the neck of each animal. 1 & 2 show a thick neck with a deep attachment to the chest... that is, the neck joins the chest low on the body. the different sholder position of 3 makes the neck harder to differentiate, but it looks considerably less bulky and attaches higher on the chest.
zoom in on the the head... color pattern is similar on all three, so not much help there. the near ear in 1 appears to be pointed tip back, opening to the camera and light inside. in 2, it's pointed tip up, opening away from the camera, both appear to be set somewhat low on the head with a wide base opening. in 3, the ear appears to be folded more flat to the back, like an irritated cat, but the ear appears smaller and set slightly higher on the head. not definitive, but more similar in 1&2 than in 3.
take a look at the color pattern under the throat. both 1 and 2 show a light chest, and that pattern continues under the neck, onto the throat and up behind the ear. in 3, I see light under the jaw behind the muzzle, and on the chest between the front legs, but not on the entire under-neck area or behind the ears.
zoom in on the front legs. 1 and 2 appear to be darkest on the leading edge of the front leg, and lighter as you go towards the back of the front leg. 3 is darkest on the inside of the far front leg, and ligher on the leading edge of the front leg. 1&2 appear to have lightly boned upper leg(above the elbow) and a lower leg that is as long from elbow to paw as the body is deep (from sternum to back). 3 has a heavier muscled upper front leg, with apparently heavier bone, and a shorter, heavier lower front leg that is a bit shorter than the depth of it's body.
zoom in on the rear legs. the position of the near hind leg in 1&2 is quite similar, with the bone between the hock or heel of the leg and the stifle or knee (the bend where the leg is close to the belly) is almost parallel to the ground in both. in 3, the same bone is much more upright in position. this could be an effect of 1&2 being more in a "creeping" position, and 3 being more in a "striding" position, but the functional angles look quite different to me. because 3 has one hind lower leg blurred, I can't really get a good read on the color pattern of the rear legs.
ok, now to the part that I think creates the strong "cat" impression I respond to... zoom in on the tails.
looking just at the base of the tail where it joins the body... in 1 I see, dark fur on top, and a very narrow band of light fur underneath the tail that appears to join the rump(where the light fur is visible) about half way down the mass of the haunch. on 2, I see the same color, but the tail fur appears to extend almost down to the line of the belly, maybe 40% deeper that the first tail. on 3 I see less dark on top, but the same lighter underneath, however the lower visible junction to the body is only perhaps a third of the way down the body. visible tail attachment of 1 & 2 seem more similar, but by no means identical. visible tail attachment of 1 & 3 do not seem similar.
so now size your browser windows and zoom so you can see from the animal's rear leg through the throat, but not the bend of the tail or the head. my general impression from that view is that 1&2 have similar body language and form, distinctly different than 3. this is especially noticable if you start with your eyes at the hind leg and move them towards the front of the animal... the visual effect of 1&2 is quite similar. 3 is not.
zoom out again and reposition your image so you see hind-leg to head on all 3, no tail in any of the images.
starting with image 2, look from the haunch to the head, I clearly see fox.
now on image 1, look from haunch to head... I can now clearly see the shape of fox.
do that again...
starting with image 3, look from haunch to head, I clearly see cat.
now on image 1, look from haunch to head... I do not see cat.
I'm not a game expert, and I've never analized game camera images before. but I have learned a lot over the years about really looking in detail, and about how to filter out what I *think* things look like from what they *really* look like.
just my 2 cents worth: that's my method and what I see in image 1, after studying the parts, is a fox with a not very fluffy under-tail and a decidely cat-like carriage of it. but nonetheless, a fox.
which is *not* what I was convinced I was seeing until I did the analysis.