Usually, the serval is boldly spotted black on tawny, with two or four stripes from the top of the head down the neck and back, transitioning into spots.
If a female servical is crossed to a male caracal, the result is a car-servical; if she is crossed to a male serval, the result is a serservical.
The serval is sometimes preyed upon by the leopard and other large cats.
Hunting and taking care of the litter is mostly what the female serval does during her day.
Animals like the eland and spotted and melanistic serval cats can be found higher up in the moorlands.
It is a cross between a serval and a domestic cat.
The serval and caracal also prey on this species.
Savannahs may also hiss -- a serval-like hiss quite different from a domestic cat's hiss, sounding more like a very loud snake.