Felidae
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Catopuma badia, Pardofelis badia) (Beurla: bay cat) - endemic to the island of Borneo that appears relatively rare compared to sympatric felids, based on the paucity of historical, as well as recent records.
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Catopuma temminckii, Pardofelis temminckii) (Beurla: Asian golden cat, Temminck's cat) - lives throughout Southeast Asia, ranging from Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, India and Bangladesh to Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Southern China, Malaysia and Sumatra
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon cultridens †) (Cuvier, 1824)
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon ekidoit †) Werdelin & Lewis, 2000
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon eurynodon †) Ewer, 1955
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon falconeri †) Pomel, 1853
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon gracilis †) Broom & Schepers, 1946
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon hesperus †) Gazin, 1933
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon inexpectatus †) Teilhard de Chardin, 1939
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon megantereon †) Croizet & Jobert, 1828
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon nihowanensis †) Teilhard de Chardin & Piveteau, 1930
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon spiryleris †) (?)
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon vakhshensis †) (?)
- (Laideann neo saidheansail: Megantereon whitei †) Broom, 1937
Iomraidhean
- ↑ Hooijer, D. A. (1947). Pleistocene remains of Panthera tigris (Linnaeus) subspecies from Wanhsien, Szechwan, China, compared with fossil and recent tigers from other localities. American Museum Novitates no. 1346.
- ↑ Brongersma, L. D. (1935). "Notes on some recent and fossil cats, chiefly from the Malay Archipelago". Zoologische Mededelingen 18: 1-89.
- ↑ Manamendra-Arachchi, K., Pethiyagoda, R., Dissanayake, R., Meegaskumbura, M. (2005). A second extinct big cat from the late Quaternary of Sri Lanka. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, Supplement 12: 423-434.
- ↑ Tchernov, E., Tsoukala, E. (1997). Middle Pleistocene (early Toringian) carnivore remains from northern Israel. Quaternary Research 48:122-136.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Harington, C. R. (1996). Pleistocene mammals of the Yukon Territory. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Alberta, Edmonton.