http://kaiko.getalp.org/sparql?query=define%20sql%3Adescribe-mode%20%22CBD%22%20%20DESCRIBE%20%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Fkaiko.getalp.org%2Fdbnary%2Feng%2F__ws_1_leopard__Noun__1%3E&output=application%2Fatom%2Bxml2024-03-28T19:55:09.518507ZOData Service and Descriptor DocumentnodeID://b63301132024-03-28T19:55:09.518507ZPanthera pardus, a large wild cat with a spotted coat native to Africa and Asia, especially the male of the species (in contrast to leopardess) .nodeID://b63301162024-03-28T19:55:09.518507Z2005, Richard Ellis, Tiger Bone & Rhino Horn: The Destruction of Wildlife for Traditional Chinese Medicine, page 197:Leopard skins have always been desirable commodities because of their spectacular spotted patterns.nodeID://b63301142024-03-28T19:55:09.518507Z1990, Dorothy L. Cheney, How Monkeys See the World: Inside the Mind of Another Species, published 1992, page 284:During all such cases when we were present they responded by giving repeated alarm calls, even when the leopard was already feeding on a carcass. We wanted to determine whether vervets knew enough about the behavior of leopards to recognize that, even in the absence of a leopard, a carcass in a tree signaled the same potential danger as did a leopard itself.nodeID://b63301152024-03-28T19:55:09.518507Z1998, Oded Borowski, Every Living Thing: Daily Use of Animals in Ancient Israel, page 201:The leopard (Panthera pardus or Felis pardus cf tulliana) is a close relative of the lion, but biblical references mentioning it are very few, suggesting that it was not as common.http://kaiko.getalp.org/dbnary/eng/__ws_1_leopard__Noun__12024-03-28T19:55:09.518507Z1