Our Misson
At Big Cat Facts, our team is committed to being the premier source for accurate and comprehensive information about big cats. We aim to educate and fascinate our audience by sharing in-depth knowledge on the biology, behavior, and diversity of these majestic animals. Our mission is to enhance understanding and appreciation of big cats through detailed profiles, updates on scientific research, and interactive educational materials, ensuring that enthusiasts and researchers alike have access to reliable and engaging content.


Our Team
At Big Cat Facts, our diverse team merges expertise with a passion for wildlife education. Comprising, skilled content researchers, and big cat enthusiasts, we utilize advanced tools to ensure accurate, engaging content. We’re dedicated to delivering dynamic and informative resources, making learning about big cats accessible and exciting. Our commitment: to empower and educate our audience about these magnificent creatures.
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Why Big Cat Enthusiasts Trust Us
Every article published on Big Cat Facts is grounded in peer-reviewed research, IUCN Red List data, and reporting from accredited conservation organisations such as Panthera, the Cheetah Conservation Fund, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and the Snow Leopard Trust. Our editorial process pairs subject-matter research with careful fact-checking before anything goes live, so readers can cite our pages with confidence whether they are students writing essays, teachers building lesson plans, or wildlife photographers preparing for field expeditions.
The Species We Cover
Big Cat Facts maintains in-depth resource hubs for the world’s most iconic large felines: lions, tigers, leopards, jaguars, snow leopards, cheetahs, cougars (also called pumas or mountain lions), and lynxes. For each species we cover habitat, range, behaviour, social structure, hunting techniques, vocal repertoire, mating and reproduction, conservation status, current threats, and the active programmes working to protect remaining wild populations. We also publish photography collections, audio clips of vocalisations, and curated documentary footage so visitors can experience these animals beyond the written word.
Our Editorial Standards
We never sensationalise or anthropomorphise big cats. Population figures, range maps, and conservation status updates are reviewed against the most recent IUCN assessment available at the time of writing, and articles are revisited annually to incorporate new field research. When experts disagree, we say so and link to the underlying studies rather than picking a side. Every photograph used on the site is licensed from wildlife photographers or sourced from public-domain archives — we do not condone or feature images obtained from canned hunts, captive-cat tourism operations, or any encounter that places animals under coercion.
Get Involved
If you spot a factual error, have new research to share, or want to suggest a topic we haven’t yet covered, please reach out via our contact page. We also welcome guest contributions from field biologists, conservation practitioners, and wildlife photographers — if you have first-hand expertise to share with our readers, get in touch and tell us what you’d like to write about. Together we can build a richer, more accurate public record of the world’s most extraordinary predators.

