It's worse than that. We've ended up singling out lions for one reason; they are the only cat species that works as a group at all. No other cat species, big or small, is socially organized. Tigers and other big cats are all solitary hunters. They only really come together to breed. They lack any of the highly sophisticated organization and social hierarchy of wolf packs. Such big cats can't touch wolf packs in their hunting... hell, most most cat hunting is stalk and dash, with the prey usually coming to them.Darth Wong wrote:You're a goddamned moron. First you say that the "big cats" (ie- a colloquial term for totally different but related species like tigers and lions) are better predators than wolves, ignoring the fact that wolves routinely use group tactics to take on much larger targets than themselves: a trait also seen in humans and one which is clearly beyond the ability or lions or tigers. Then you turn around and say that domestic cats are better than dogs because they're tougher for any given size.
Don't get me wrong. I like big cats. They are great animals. But if we are talking about being predators, wolves are just amazing. Wolves even rally before hunts; play fighting and have group howls to get themselves ready. That sort of behavior is something humans can relate to, they do it for the exact same reason humans do before battles and sports events. That's just badass.