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Tests On DNA After 'Big Cat' Killing
A post mortem examination on a dog believed to have been killed by a panther-like animal in west Wales has confirmed that it was killed by a large predator.
Further tests have been ordered, as the examination proved inconclusive, and are expected to take another two weeks.
The animal was described as like a puma or panther. DNA samples will now be taken from hairs found in the whippet's mouth.
Tests were arranged by the Welsh Assembly's Wildlife Advisory Unit to determine what exactly killed the dog at Llangadog, near Llandovery, Carmarthenshire.
Dyfed-Powys Police firearms experts were drafted in after the attack on Sunday evening.
The dog was seen being attacked by a large cat, and was then joined by what was thought to have been its cub.
Police issued a warning to farmers to be vigilant after Mike Shepherd, 62, came face to face with the big cat when looking for the missing whippet, which belonged to a neighbour.
Farmland Sighting.
He discovered the animal, with blood over its face, standing over the dog's lifeless form, then ran inside to alert police.
Another sighting was reported several days later. A milk tanker driver from Whitland, saw the animal in farmland at Ffairfach, near Llandeilo at around mid day on Thursday, a police spokesman said.
The scene of the latest sighting is between 10 and 12 miles south of Llangadog, where the killing took place.
The UK rural affairs ministry, Defra, said was is unlikely to launch an inquiry into the alleged sightings.
Breeding.
It played down claims that escaped big cats may be breeding in the wild, arguing there is no evidence of a sizeable population.
Professor Alayne Street-Perrot, who travelled to the United States to study big cats after her horses were attacked six years ago, says the animals may be breeding in the wild.
"It's very difficult to see what can be done, in that the government has let the situation get this far," she said.
"A lot of these cats were released after the Dangerous Wild Animals Act in 1976 and if the problem had been nipped in the bud then, we wouldn't have the problem we do now.
Caution Advised. "Unless they are still being released, they must be breeding. "In locations with a lot of wooded cover, where cats are being seen regularly, people do have to be careful."
A lorry driver reported another sighting last week near the Co-operative Creamery at Llangadog. Armed police were called after the driver reported seeing the cat near vehicles at the creamery in the early hours of Wednesday.
The cat was not traced, but Dyfed-Powys Police have been viewing CCTV tapes from the area.
BBC News: 11 January, 2003.

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