
When one Kiwi woman saw a cat lying dead by the side of the road she immediately wanted to help the poor pet鈥檚 owners to find closure.
She took the animal to a nearby vet clinic, in the hope that they might identify it by microchip.
Later, she checked in to see if her good deed had resulted in identifying the poor pussycat.
鈥淗i there,鈥 the email began.
聽鈥淵esterday I brought a deceased cat that I found on the road into your clinic to be microchip checked.
鈥淚 was just wondering if you had any luck locating a chip or the owner? Thank you for your help.鈥
The vets had an answer for her - but it wasn鈥檛 the one she expected.
鈥淭hank you so much for caring and bringing the animal into us,鈥 they began gently.
They then revealed that a close inspection of the deceased had given another clue to its identity.
鈥淲hen we tried to scan the pet, our nurses realised that it was in fact a possum.
鈥淚t was very hard to tell due to the severe face trauma.鈥
The possum's face had suffered severe trauma. Photo / 九一星空无限
The vet then said the 鈥渙nly indication was the feet compared to cat鈥檚 paws鈥.
The kind-hearted woman shared a screenshot of the email with a colleague and it made its way online.
罢丑别听Herald聽contacted the colleague who said that her workmate was too embarrassed about the incident to comment.
Some online commenters said that they had made a similar mistake in the past, stopping to move a dead cat from the road only to find it was a pest marsupial.
Mistaking a possum for a cat is far from the wildest misidentification that has been made on the introduced critters.
In 2021, an East Auckland woman took to social media to ask her neighbours about the strange creature she encountered in her backyard.
鈥淚 just saw a cat-like animal,鈥 she wrote.
鈥淚t comes up with a size of cat, but with a piggy nose and a monkey body. Anyone can point out name of this animal?鈥
Terrifying. Photo / Facebook
East Aucklanders who knew the animal by sight were quick to offer their advice to their confused neighbour.
鈥淭he infamous Monkey Cat of East Auckland I believe,鈥 one man wrote.
鈥淐hupacabra,鈥 wrote another, misidentifying the animal as a far less terrifying mythical animal from the Americas that sucks the blood from livestock.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a Drop Cat,鈥 another said. 鈥淎 close cousin of Aussie鈥檚 Drop Bears.鈥
Others suggested it was an armadillo that had shed its armour or 鈥渟triped hyena鈥 and suggested it could be caught using fresh chicken meat as bait.
Many more correctly identified the Monkey Cat, calling it by its more popular name of 鈥減ossum鈥.
鈥淏ro it鈥檚 a Possum, welcome to NZ,鈥 one man wrote.
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