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News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

How to tell bobcat from lynx

Two species have relatively similar appearance, size and color

By Tamera Twitty, The Gazette (Colorado Springs, Colo.)
Published: February 25, 2022, 6:03am
2 Photos
A lynx standing watchfully in the snow.
A lynx standing watchfully in the snow. (Christy Hader/Dreamstime) Photo Gallery

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The lynx and the bobcat are both midsized predators found in Colorado. It’s easy to confuse the two species with each other due to their relatively similar appearance, size and color. However, it is much rarer to see a lynx in the Centennial State.

Lynx were considered eradicated from the state in around 1973, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Reintroduction began in the 1990s. Today, Colorado’s San Juan Mountains are home to an estimated 150-250 lynx.

Bobcats have a significantly larger population, with an estimated 12,000 members of this species found around the state. Many reported “lynx” sightings are actually just misidentified bobcats.

Though there are many similarities between the midsized feline species, there are also key differences that make each distinguishable.

Lynx fur is longer and appears grayish-brown in the winter, shortening and becoming browner in the summer, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

“They lack distinct spots and striping. A bobcat will typically have distinct spotting on their coats. The front legs of a bobcat will often have distinct striping, as well as their faces,” Colorado Parks and Wildlife said on its website.

Lynx also have notably larger feet than bobcats.

“The feet of a lynx will look out of proportion to the rest of their body. A bobcat has much smaller feet, which appear proportional to the rest of their body, as if it were a very large house cat,” Colorado Parks and Wildlife said.

A lynx’s tail is completely black at the tip, while a bobcat’s is typically black and white.

“The tail of a bobcat is also usually longer than a lynx, although they both have the short tail, which easily makes them distinguishable from any other wild cat,” Colorado Parks and Wildlife said.

Lynx that have been released in Colorado are all wearing radio collars that help Colorado Parks and Wildlife track them. A collar is a dead giveaway that what you’re looking at is a lynx.

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