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A fishing cat was just born at the Denver Zoo. And Miso-Chi is the most adorable thing we’ve seen this week.

Rare cub is just 6 weeks old and already learning to fish with its hook-like claws

Miso-Chi
Provided by the Denver Zoo
Denver Zoo’s fishing cat cub named Miso-Chi was born on January 25., 2017.
Denver Post online news editor for ...
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The Denver Zoo, lately , on Friday announced its first successful birth of a rare — and insanely adorable — fishing cat.

The 6-week-old cub, named Miso-Chi, is starting to learn to dive for live fish, alongside its equally cute mother at the zoo’s Fishing Cat Lagoon.

Miso-Chi was born Jan. 25 to proud parents Namfon, its mother, and father Ronaldo. The zoo doesn’t yet know if Miso-Chi is a boy or a girl.

A curious shot of Miso-Chi, the rare fishing cat just born at Denver Zoo.
Provided by the Denver Zoo
Denver Zoo's fishing cat cub named Miso-Chi was born on January 25., 2017.

“As their name suggests, fishing cats are powerful swimmers and fish form an important part of their diet,” Denver Zoo said Friday in a news release. The cats also eat rodents, amphibians and aquatic birds.

The cats have been observed attracting fish by lightly tapping the water’s surface with their paw, mimicking insect movement. The animals then dive into water to catch the fish that come near and — because their claws do not fully retract — use them like fishing hooks to spear the slippery fish.

Fishing cats also wade in shallow water to hunt for prey to scoop out. And don’t call them fisher cats — those are North American mammals in the weasel family.

Although they resemble a house cat, they are about twice the size of an average house cat, the zoo says, and they are 2- to 3-feet long with a foot-long tail. They typically weigh 18 to 26 pounds and have stocky builds with short legs.

Fishing cats are scattered throughout southwest India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Malaysia, Thailand, Sumatra, Java and Pakistan, living primarily in wetland areas like swamps, marshes and densely vegetated areas along rivers and streams.

“Exact fishing cat population numbers in the wild aren’t known because they are so rarely encountered,” the release said. “However, it is believed there are less than 10,000 individuals and their numbers are declining. The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies them as vulnerable.”

The zoo says fishing cats’ biggest threats are wetland destruction and conversion to farmland. They are also threatened by pollution from industry, agricultural pesticides, destructive fishing practices and poaching for food, medicine and body parts.

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