I know, but that is where the problem begins, and ends. The difference between biblical and non-biblical nomination here is beyond the pale.
In Genesis, the Bible uses the word 'kind.' We have the word cat and use this to refer to many different animals, lions, tigers, leopards, and our small feline friends. In the Bible, if these animals all descend from on parent animal, they would be one kind. In Africa, we have many different types of antelope, but it seems as if many are simply variations on one parent animal, as we see in dogs where there is a
huge variety of types of dogs, though they all may originate with one single parent dog. one kind, be it wolf, or whatever this parent was.
It is therefore an assumption that at times, a species is the same as a kind, an other times not. Since the usage of the words kind and species don't have the same origin or usage, I cannot define clearly what is not provided information for.
Just for fun, here is the link for Puma: >
Puma (genus) - Wikipedia<
If you look at the definitions on the right side of the page under its picture, you can see that the way science does things today has no correspondence to the simple 'kind' we were given.
Quoting Wiki:
I don't think a kind needs to be able to reproduce sexually. If our house-cat bred from a common ancestor as the other large cats, they would be one kind--which may be why we call all of them cats! However, the little house-cat surely cannot interbreed with a tiger, or a lion.
Since you say that tigers and lions are different species, and I would say they are one kind, originating from one parent kind in the past, already the problem is becoming clear.