I always cut open the stomachs of predators to examine the contents. It reveals the facts of their most recent meals and also shows some remains of other prey species that haven't completely digested as of yet such as small bones, hair and skulls from small rodents/packrats.
Pack rats, cottontails and small bird and turkey feathers I have found within the same bobcat stomach contents at times in Kansas.
One interesting fact I learned by doing stomach content analysis is how many had a very full to a gorged stomach. Leading me to the conclusion that most of these predators weren't caught due to being hungry.
I wonder what the reasoning was for this intrepretation.? Opportunity, Greed, Curiosity, all the above ?
Another observation is how large of a mass of meat/hair sticks, small stones and pine needles were found within those swallowed masses of meat.
I have found many bobcats/coyotes stomachs had some extremely large sections of flesh/hair/sticks, stones etc.. Some the size of a soft ball still intact and some 8 -10" long sections of tissue/hair/bone and what ever was stuck to the meat that was native "ground cover material" to the kill site.
This info gave me specfic areas that these predators were hunting and some of their preferred areas to score a kill.
Flesh, hair and bone just bit, ripped and torn from the prey animal and swallowed down very quickly it seems. Not much chewing indicated of the food at all. Just seems they killed the animal, tore it apart as quickly as they could and down the hatch it went.
That would suggest to me their fear or concern that another predator may come along and attempt to steal its kill. So it needed to eat as quickly as possible at least in my evaluation. Maybe others would have another theory.
Larger predators like lions many times prefer to drag their prey off to a more somewhat secluded area for feeding on its kill.
I dont cut open many bellies, but occasionally I find a big tom cat who is especially round and curiosity gets the best of me. I always assumed the sticks, pine straw, grass, and dirt I found in the bellies was done when they were in the trap. It never occured to me that it could/would be from their last meal. Thanks for posting that insight and getting my gears turning