Are these the final few days of the Scottish wildcat, now numbering perhaps as few as 35 scattered beasts?
That is the fear of some supporters of Scotland's most vivid species, and it is leading to an almighty row over a creature that has graced the Highlands for around 10,000 years.
The wildcat's imminent extinction may have been camouflaged by the existence of a counterfeit cat - a feline facsimile that looks like a wildcat but whose genealogy is far from pure.
Last week the Scottish Government and its leading environmental agency, Scottish Natural Heritage, in response to insistent calls for action to protect this endangered species, announced a £2 million ($3.9 million), six-year strategic plan to reverse the decline by reducing cross-breeding with domestic and feral cats and curbing exposure to feline diseases.
The government masterplan is as fake as the DNA of the hybrids masquerading as pure-bloods, said Steve Piper, founder of the Scottish Wildcat Association and the country's foremost authority on the preservation of the species.