It's possible, but one very promising lead has been run to ground.
This
is a case I worked on myself: I took Peter Hocking, the discoverer of one and
possibly two possible new cats in Peru, to Denver to meet with a mammologist
several years ago, but all we had were photographs of a skull, and Dr. Cheri
Jones, the expert at the Denver museum, thought that inconclusive. Hocking thought his “speckled tiger” might
actually a be a jaguar, but a previously unknown color morph, while the
“striped tiger” (reportedly rufous in color with white vertical stripes) was
more likely to be a new species. If this
proved true, Hocking would have had the first new big cat species described in
nearly a century and a half.
If
only.
Now
another friend of mine, Darren Naish, has taken up the case. He and his
collaborators, including Hocking, have been disappointed. It appears the Peruvian finds must have been
unusual jaguars - VERY unusual, in terms of reported coat color, but otherwise
that trail has petered out. When
reading this paper, also note the excellent recap of recent mammal discoveries
and discovery trends. We have by no means catalogued all the mammals of Earth.
Here's the paper!
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