No. In most states you have to have an 8-foot enclosure for a wolfdog in order to be approved for a permit. And, wolves can't climb . Well, not like cats anyway---some wolves can climb fences.aren't they essentially saying that what you would use to confine a regular dog is good enough for a wolf dog?
I suspect that there are no places that allow wolfdogs without a permit but outlaw Savannahs. The laws usually group all hybrids together.
A later-generation Savannah, no. They have very little wild blood.I also may have trouble believing that a later generation Savannah cat could hurt me any worse than any other domesticated cat, regardless of if it's hybrid or not, simply due to its small size.
Feral cats and wildcats are very different. Feral cats are scared. They don't want to hurt anybody. The same applies to most wild wildcats. But a "tamed" wildcat has little/no fear of humans, so that can end up being more dangerous. Just as domestic dogs and "tamed" wolves can be far more dangerous than wild wolves.
I don't know of many municipalities that would allow a 40-pound half-tamed wildcat to run loose. Plain old domestic dogs are not allowed to run loose because they can be dangerous. They sure aren't going to let a cat that size run around with no supervision. A wild animal will be killed if it becomes problematic. And, so will a pet wildcat .Why is the enclosure required? Aren't things like bobcats found in the wild? People don't try to cage them, and wouldn't a wildcat be afraid of people it doesn't know anyway?