Showing posts with label cougar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cougar. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2012

Extinct? Cougar sightings on the rise in eastern United States

A recent increase in sightings of cougars may force wildlife officials to rethink the notion that they're extinct.

A year ago the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared that the big cat no longer existed in eastern states. But earlier this month a journalist at the Recorder newspaper in Greenfield, Massachusetts, reported cougar sightings on a farm near the Vermont border, by an Amtrak engineer.

Sports editor and blogger Gary Sanderson told msnbc.com that he began writing about cougars, also known as mountain lions, when he went hunting with a trapper who found footprints too big to belong to a bobcat in Conway ibn rural Massachusetts.

He added that he was told by wildlife officials that he was irresponsible to promote the notion of their presence.
In the past week local media in Connecticut have reported on the increase in sightings in that state.

Last June a cougar, which was spotted in Greenwich just 70 miles from New York City, was killed by a car in nearly Milford six days later. 


Saturday, September 3, 2011

Verified cougar in Louisiana (via Chad Arment)

Verified Cougar Sighting in Vernon Parish, Louisiana
August 31, 2011

In this age of trail cams and cell phone cameras, it's getting more difficult for Bigfoot or any other wild creature to roam the earth undocumented. Mountain lions – particularly young males searching for a place to call their own – keep showing up in photographic evidence, such as this one that comes to us from Louisiana.

Cougars are both feared and marveled at, so we thought you might like to read this report...

The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) has received photographic evidence of the presence of a cougar in Vernon Parish.

A private citizen sent LDWF a trail camera picture taken Aug. 13, 2011. LDWF Large Carnivore Program Manager Maria Davidson and biologist Brandon Wear conducted a site investigation that confirmed the authenticity of the photograph.

"It is quite possible for this animal to be captured on other trail cameras placed at deer bait sites," Davidson said. "Deer are the primary prey item for cougars; therefore, they are drawn to areas where deer congregate."

It is unlikely this cougar will remain in any one area longer than it would take to consume a kill. Cougars do not prefer to eat spoiled meat and will move on as soon as the Louisiana heat and humidity take its toll on the kill.

"It is impossible to determine if the animal in the photograph is a wild, free-ranging cougar, or an escaped captive," Davidson added. "Although it is illegal to own a cougar in Louisiana, it is possible that there are some illegally held 'pets' in the state."

LDWF has documented several occurrences since 2002. The first cougar sighting was in 2002 by an employee at Lake Fausse Point State Park. That sighting was later confirmed with DNA analysis from scat found at the site. Three trail camera photos were taken of a cougar in Winn, Vernon and Allen parishes in 2008. Subsequently on Nov. 30, 2008, a cougar was shot and killed in a neighborhood by Bossier City Police Department.

The mountain lion, cougar, panther or puma are names that all refer to the same animal. Their color ranges from lighter tan to brownish grey. The only species of big cats that occur as black are the jaguar and leopard. Jaguars are native to South America and leopards are native to Africa. Both species can occur as spotted or black, although in both cases the spotted variety is much more common. Although LDWF receives numerous calls about black panthers, there has never been a documented case of a black cougar anywhere in North America.

The vast majority of these reports received by LDWF cannot be verified due to the very nature of a sighting. Many of the calls are determined to be cases of mistaken identity, with dog tracks making up the majority of the evidence submitted by those reporting cougar sightings. Other animals commonly mistaken for cougars are bobcats and house cats, usually seen from a distance or in varying shades of light.

The significant lack of physical evidence indicates that Louisiana does not have an established, breeding population of cougars. In states that have verified small populations of cougars, physical evidence can readily be found in the form of tracks, cached deer kills, scat and road kills.

The recent sightings of cougars in Louisiana are believed to be young animals dispersing from existing populations. An expanding population in Texas can produce dispersing individual cougars that move into suitable habitat in Louisiana. Young males are known to disperse from their birthplace and travel hundreds of miles seeking their own territories.

Cougars that occur in Louisiana are protected under state and federal law. Penalties for taking a cougar in Louisiana may include up to one year in jail and/or a $100,000 fine. Anyone with any information regarding the taking of a cougar should call the Operation Game Thief hotline at 1-800-442-2511.. Callers may remain anonymous and may receive a cash reward.

http://outdoornews.com/news/article_88cd008e-d3dd-11e0-b214-001cc4c002e0.html

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Friends Wonder If Cougar Hurt Horses Near Austin, Minn.


April 29, 2011 10:18 PM
By Lindsey Seavert, WCCO-TV

AUSTIN, Minn. (AP) – A group of friends wonders whether a cougar was responsible for injuries suffered by some horses in rural Austin.

The alleged attack happened on April 20 northwest of Austin. Jolene Morrison noticed her horse, Sapphire, had a bad limp, numerous gashes and missing hair. The mare’s 2-year-old colt also was hurt.

Homeowner Glenn Ward, who boards the horses, tells the Austin Daily Herald he’s certain it’s a cougar. Ward says something would have had to jump the fence to get in.

DNR officials and the Freeborn County sheriff’s office haven’t been able to prove what caused the horses’ wounds. The DNR says it’s unlikely it’s a cougar.

Meanwhile, Ward and Morrison are keeping the horses locked in the barn until they think things are safe.

http://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2011/04/29/friends-wonder-if-cougar-hurt-horses-near-austin-minn/

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Cougar sighted in Victoria-area park

CBC News
Posted: Apr 21, 2011 8:49 PM PT

A full-grown cougar was spotted by staff Thursday at Goldstream Park near Victoria Thursday, just one hour before a kindergarten class was scheduled to visit.

The animal was caught on a video camera as it sauntered a few metres away from one of the main buildings in the park.

The sighting is not likely to be repeated and the animal likely will not be a threat, according to park operator Rick Carswell.

"It's when they're hurt or startled that maybe they would come back at you," said Carswell. "But usually they would just run away... We think this one just ran right through not knowing that we were around."

The kindergarten class was allowed to complete its visit and view some salmon fry as planned in the park, about 17 kilometres from downtown Victoria.

But the visit had an added brief lecture from park staff — on cougar safety.
Attacks rare

Cougar sightings are common, especially on Vancouver Island, but attacks, while often dramatic, are rare.

Five people have been killed by cougar attacks in the past 100 years in B.C., according to the provincial environment ministry website. Four of those deaths occurred on Vancouver Island.

During the same period, there were 29 non-fatal attacks in British Columbia, 20 of which occurred on Vancouver Island, the website said.

The majority of the attacks were on children under the age of 16.

See video at: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2011/04/21/bc-goldstream-cougar.html

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Federal researchers declare eastern cougar extinct

ALLENTOWN, Pa. – The "ghost cat" is just that.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday declared the eastern cougar to be extinct, confirming a widely held belief among wildlife biologists that native populations of the big cat were wiped out by man a century ago.

After a lengthy review, federal officials concluded there are no breeding populations of cougars — also known as pumas, panthers, mountain lions and catamounts — in the eastern United States. Researchers believe the eastern cougar subspecies has probably been extinct since the 1930s.

Wednesday's declaration paves the way for the eastern cougar to be removed from the endangered species list, where it was placed in 1973. The agency's decision to declare the eastern cougar extinct does not affect the status of the Florida panther, another endangered wildcat.

Some hunters and outdoors enthusiasts have long insisted there's a small breeding population of eastern cougars, saying the secretive cats have simply eluded detection — hence the "ghost cat" moniker. The wildlife service said Wednesday it confirmed 108 sightings between 1900 and 2010, but that these animals either escaped or were released from captivity, or migrated from western states to the Midwest.

"The Fish and Wildlife Service fully believes that some people have seen cougars, and that was an important part of the review that we did," said Mark McCollough, an endangered species biologist who led the agency's eastern cougar study. "We went on to evaluate where these animals would be coming from."

A breeding population of eastern cougars would almost certainly have left evidence of its existence, he said. Cats would have been hit by cars or caught in traps, left tracks in the snow or turned up on any of the hundreds of thousands of trail cameras that dot Eastern forests.

But researchers have come up empty.

The private Eastern Cougar Foundation, for example, spent a decade looking for evidence. Finding none, it changed its name to the Cougar Rewilding Foundation last year and shifted its focus from confirming sightings to advocating for the restoration of the big cat to its pre-colonial habitat.

"We would have loved nothing more than for there to be a remnant wild population of cougars on the East Coast," said Christopher Spatz, the foundation's president. "We're not seeing (evidence) because they're not here."

Others maintain that wild cougars still prowl east of the Mississippi.

Ray Sedorchuk, 45, an avid hunter and outdoorsman, said he got an excellent look at a cougar last June in rural Bradford County, in northern Pennsylvania. He was in his truck when a reddish-brown animal with a long tail crossed the road. He said he jammed on the brakes, and the cougar stopped in its tracks.

"I could see the body, the tail and the head, the entire animal, perfectly. It's not a bobcat, it's not a housecat, it's a cougar," he said. "It's a sleek animal. It ran low to the ground and stealth-like. It moved with elegance."

Sedorchuk, a freelance writer who spends copious amounts of time in the woods, said he'd always been skeptical of the eastern cougar's existence, even as two of his friends insisted to him that they had seen them in the wild.

And now?

"I believe that they're here, without even thinking twice about it," he said. "I believe there aren't that many, but there are enough where they can get together and breed."

Once widely dispersed throughout the eastern United States, the mountain lion was all but wiped out by the turn of the last century. Cougars were killed in vast numbers, and states even held bounties. A nearly catastrophic decline in white-tailed deer — the main prey of mountain lions — also contributed to the species' extirpation.

McCollough said the last wild cougar was believed to have been killed in Maine in 1938.

The wildlife service treated the eastern cougar as a distinct subspecies, even though some biologists now believe it is genetically the same as its western brethren, which is increasing in number and extending its range. Some experts believe that mountain lions will eventually make their way back East.

The loss of a top-level predator like the cougar has had ecological consequences, including an explosion in the deer population and a corresponding decline in the health of Eastern forests.

"Our ecosystems are collapsing up and down the East Coast, and they're collapsing because we have too many white-tailed deer," said Spatz. "Our forests are not being permitted to regenerate."

Cougars and wolves, he said, would thin the deer herd through direct predation while also acting as "natural shepherds," forcing deer to become more vigilant and "stop browsing like cattle."

Spatz's group would like the federal government to reintroduce cougars and wolves to the eastern United States, though he acknowledged any such plan would come up against fierce resistance.

The wildlife service said Wednesday it has no authority under the Endangered Species Act to reintroduce the mountain lion to the East.
___
Online:
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/ecougar/

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110302/ap_on_sc/us_eastern_cougar

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Esquimalt cougar sighting prompts school warning

By Sandra McCulloch, timescolonist.com
February 28, 2011

Victoria, B.C. - A cougar sighting in Esquimalt Monday afternoon prompted an elementary school to taking precautions before sending children home for the day.

Meanwhile, a provincial conservation officer is urging parents in the area to keep an eye on small children and pets.

Scott Thomas, principal of Macaulay Elementary School, sent an email to parents saying the school was notified of the sighting at Work Point at 2:40 p.m., eight minutes before the school was to let out for the day.

“Today we were able to connect all students who were walking home after school with their parents/guardians,” Scott said in the email.

He asked parents to ensure their children get safely to and from school while the cougar is in the area.

Two witnesses called the military police at CFB Esquimalt to report seeing the cougar at Work Point, said Peter Pauwels, a conservation officer with the B.C. Conservation Service.

A cougar was also spotted in the area a few days ago, he said.

The military haven’t asked the B.C. Conservation Service for assistance, he added, so conservation officers haven’t been involved.

“Because it’s on military property, we let them make the decision on when they want our help,” Pauwels said.

“At this point, they’re not requesting our involvement.”

It’s unlikely anyway that conservation officers would track or trap the cougar, he said. “There’s not a whole lot we can do because the only way we can catch this thing is with hounds, and an area like that is not that easy to hunt in.

“We’d have to have a situation where the cougar is staying there for a prolonged period of time and we’re getting lots of good fresh sightings.”

Cougars can be dangerous, and anyone who sees one should not approach it or run away, said Pauwels.

“Small children shouldn’t be outside playing by themselves,” he said. “Cougars are most active between dusk and dawn. Avoid going to areas thick with bush.”

Anyone who spots the cougar should call the conservation service at 1-800-663-9453.


http://www.timescolonist.com/Esquimalt+cougar+sighting+prompts+school+warning/4362461/story.html

Friday, February 18, 2011

New Missouri Mountain Lion Sighting Confirmed

Mo. Dept. of Conservation
Cat Photographed In Linn County In December

POSTED: 5:18 pm CST February 16, 2011

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- The Missouri Department of Conservation has confirmed that a cat sighted in central Missouri in December is a mountain lion.

A landowner in southern Linn County contacted the MDC on Feb. 15 with two photos of the animal taken by a trail camera on Dec. 29.

“The photo is clearly of a mountain lion and we have confirmed the location,” said Jeff Beringer, resource scientist with the MDC’s Mountain Lion Response Team. “It may be wearing a radio collar based on what appears to be an antenna extending from the cat’s neck.”

The Linn County location is about 25 miles from where a mountain was shot and killed in Macon County on Jan. 22. This latest confirmed sighting makes five confirmed reports of a mountain lion in Missouri since November and 15 confirmed reports over the past 16 years.

Beringer said the lions appear to be young males roaming from other states.

“It is very difficult to determine exactly where these individual cats are coming from, but we do know that young male mountain lions go in search of new territories at about 18 months of age and during this time of year,” he explained. “And it makes sense that these big cats could roam into Missouri from the west and use the Missouri river and other river corridors to move throughout the state without being easily detected.”

He said mountain lion populations in Texas, Colorado, South Dakota and Nebraska are also increasing.

Mountain lions are nocturnal, secretive and generally avoid contact with humans.

“We have no documented cases in Missouri of mountain lions attacking livestock, people or pets,” he said. “There is a much greater risk of harm from automobiles, stray dogs and lightning strikes than from mountain lions.”

Beringer explained that the MDC’s Mountain Lion Response Team gets hundreds of calls and emails each year from people who believe they have seen mountain lions. When there is some type of physical evidence, the team investigates.

“More than 90 percent of these investigations turn out to be bobcats, house cats, or dogs,” he said. “Our investigations involving claims of pets or livestock being attacked by mountain lions typically turn out to be the work of dogs. And most of the photos we get of mountain lions turn out to be doctored photographs circulating on the Internet.”

Watch KMBC 9 News at 10 p.m. Thursday for a special report on mountain lion sightings in the region.


http://www.kmbc.com/news/26892073/detail.html

Monday, January 31, 2011

Wolf sighting is ruled unsubstantiated

By Miles Blumhardt • MilesBlumhardt@coloradoan.com • January 31, 2011

Was it a wolf that Ron Greenwald saw just east of Fort Collins last week, or just a big coyote?

Or could it have been a wandering wolf hybrid?

Greenwald, who lives near Colorado Highway 14 and Larimer County Road 3, is sure he saw through binoculars on Tuesday a wolf on a ridge about 100 yards away from his house catching mice in a pasture with some cut corn.

Mark Leslie, Division of Wildlife area manager for the Fort Collins-Greeley area, isn't so sure.

"I saw a wolf, but I guess I'm just a farm boy, and some people will say I saw a coyote or dog,’’ said the retired Greenwald, who worked for the U.S. Forest Service for 35 years and said he’s seen wolves in the wild in Wyoming. “I guess it could have been a wolf hybrid, but it wasn’t a coyote or dog.’’

Greenwald described the animal as the size of a good-sized dog mostly brown with some black and gray. Coyotes are mostly gray with some buff color and do not possess black coloring. Wolves are much larger than coyotes and usually are gray or black with some buff coloring.

Leslie talked to Greenwald after being informed by the Coloradoan of the sighting. After interviewing Greenwald, who did not have photos of the animal, and not finding any tracks or hair, Leslie said he has a lack of solid information that it actually was a wolf.

“The place where he saw the animal was an area with houses nearby, and that’s not typical wolf habitat,’’ said Leslie, who visited the site where Greenwald said he saw the animal. “I didn’t find anything. With nothing else to go on, the sighting is ruled unsubstantiated.’’

Wolves are classified as endangered in Colorado. The state’s wolf population was largely extirpated in the 1940s.

However, wandering wolves have made appearances from time to time in the state. Most recently, two wolves were spotted in Colorado in 2009. One died of poisoning in Eagle County.

Leslie said that’s the last confirmed sighting of wolves in Colorado of which he is aware. In February 2007, DOW wildlife managers captured brief video of what appeared to be a wolf north of Walden.

http://www.coloradoan.com/article/20110131/NEWS01/101310333/Wolf-sighting-is-ruled-unsubstantiated

Wolf sighting is ruled unsubstantiated

By Miles Blumhardt • MilesBlumhardt@coloradoan.com • January 31, 2011

Was it a wolf that Ron Greenwald saw just east of Fort Collins last week, or just a big coyote?

Or could it have been a wandering wolf hybrid?

Greenwald, who lives near Colorado Highway 14 and Larimer County Road 3, is sure he saw through binoculars on Tuesday a wolf on a ridge about 100 yards away from his house catching mice in a pasture with some cut corn.

Mark Leslie, Division of Wildlife area manager for the Fort Collins-Greeley area, isn't so sure.

"I saw a wolf, but I guess I'm just a farm boy, and some people will say I saw a coyote or dog,’’ said the retired Greenwald, who worked for the U.S. Forest Service for 35 years and said he’s seen wolves in the wild in Wyoming. “I guess it could have been a wolf hybrid, but it wasn’t a coyote or dog.’’

Greenwald described the animal as the size of a good-sized dog mostly brown with some black and gray. Coyotes are mostly gray with some buff color and do not possess black coloring. Wolves are much larger than coyotes and usually are gray or black with some buff coloring.

Leslie talked to Greenwald after being informed by the Coloradoan of the sighting. After interviewing Greenwald, who did not have photos of the animal, and not finding any tracks or hair, Leslie said he has a lack of solid information that it actually was a wolf.

“The place where he saw the animal was an area with houses nearby, and that’s not typical wolf habitat,’’ said Leslie, who visited the site where Greenwald said he saw the animal. “I didn’t find anything. With nothing else to go on, the sighting is ruled unsubstantiated.’’

Wolves are classified as endangered in Colorado. The state’s wolf population was largely extirpated in the 1940s.

However, wandering wolves have made appearances from time to time in the state. Most recently, two wolves were spotted in Colorado in 2009. One died of poisoning in Eagle County.

Leslie said that’s the last confirmed sighting of wolves in Colorado of which he is aware. In February 2007, DOW wildlife managers captured brief video of what appeared to be a wolf north of Walden.

http://www.coloradoan.com/article/20110131/NEWS01/101310333/Wolf-sighting-is-ruled-unsubstantiated

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Wisconsin DNR says animal sighted not a cougar

Associated Press

The state Department of Natural Resources says there is no evidence that an animal sighted in southern Wisconsin last week was a cougar.

DNR Warden Ryan Ellifson says the possible sighting happened last Thursday about 7:30 a.m. in the town of Koshkonong. The animal was seen about 200 to 300 yards away, toward the center of a field.

A motorist — who usually looks for deer — saw something that "did not look like a deer."

A Jefferson County sheriff's deputy went to the scene, but by the time he arrived, there was nothing to see.

The DNR warden who investigated tells the Daily Jefferson County Union that he found "nothing that looked like it could be a cougar or even cat-like." He says it could have been a coyote.

http://www.twincities.com/outdoors/ci_17216492?nclick_check=1

Wisconsin DNR says animal sighted not a cougar

Associated Press

The state Department of Natural Resources says there is no evidence that an animal sighted in southern Wisconsin last week was a cougar.

DNR Warden Ryan Ellifson says the possible sighting happened last Thursday about 7:30 a.m. in the town of Koshkonong. The animal was seen about 200 to 300 yards away, toward the center of a field.

A motorist — who usually looks for deer — saw something that "did not look like a deer."

A Jefferson County sheriff's deputy went to the scene, but by the time he arrived, there was nothing to see.

The DNR warden who investigated tells the Daily Jefferson County Union that he found "nothing that looked like it could be a cougar or even cat-like." He says it could have been a coyote.

http://www.twincities.com/outdoors/ci_17216492?nclick_check=1

Friday, January 21, 2011

Mountain lion sighting confirmed in Chesterfield

This photo of a mountain lion was taken Jan. 12 by a
Chesterfield resident. Photo courtesy of Missouri
Department of Conservation.
Posted: Thursday, January 20, 2011 4:21 pm

CHESTERFIELD • The Missouri Department of Conservation has examined photos of a mountain lion taken Jan. 12 in a wooded area and says they are valid.

"While we did not find further evidence, such as tracks, we can confirm that the photos are of a mountain lion at the reported location," Jeff Beringer, a resource scientist with the department, said in a statement released this afternoon. "We don't know anything else about this cat other than it was here."

The photos were taken by Garrett Jensen of Chesterfield with a trail camera. The Department of Conservation did not release the exact location, saying it does not want people flocking to the site. It would say only that the site was near the Missouri River.

This is the 13th confirmed report of a mountain lion in Missouri since 1994, and the first in the St. Louis area in that time. But the Department of Conservation pointed out that it has no documented cases of mountain lions attacking livestock, pets or people. Mountain lions are nocturnal and tend to avoid humans.

The Department of Conservation gets hundreds of calls and e-mails from people claiming to have seen mountain lions. Most turn out to be bobcats, house cats or dogs.

Beringer said mountain lions seen in Missouri are probably young males roaming from surrounding states, searching for new territory, usually along a river.

Mountain lions are also called cougars, panthers and pumas.

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/article_e08c1c9e-24e5-11e0-a8e6-0017a4a78c22.html

Mountain lion sighting confirmed in Chesterfield

This photo of a mountain lion was taken Jan. 12 by a
Chesterfield resident. Photo courtesy of Missouri
Department of Conservation.
Posted: Thursday, January 20, 2011 4:21 pm

CHESTERFIELD • The Missouri Department of Conservation has examined photos of a mountain lion taken Jan. 12 in a wooded area and says they are valid.

"While we did not find further evidence, such as tracks, we can confirm that the photos are of a mountain lion at the reported location," Jeff Beringer, a resource scientist with the department, said in a statement released this afternoon. "We don't know anything else about this cat other than it was here."

The photos were taken by Garrett Jensen of Chesterfield with a trail camera. The Department of Conservation did not release the exact location, saying it does not want people flocking to the site. It would say only that the site was near the Missouri River.

This is the 13th confirmed report of a mountain lion in Missouri since 1994, and the first in the St. Louis area in that time. But the Department of Conservation pointed out that it has no documented cases of mountain lions attacking livestock, pets or people. Mountain lions are nocturnal and tend to avoid humans.

The Department of Conservation gets hundreds of calls and e-mails from people claiming to have seen mountain lions. Most turn out to be bobcats, house cats or dogs.

Beringer said mountain lions seen in Missouri are probably young males roaming from surrounding states, searching for new territory, usually along a river.

Mountain lions are also called cougars, panthers and pumas.

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/article_e08c1c9e-24e5-11e0-a8e6-0017a4a78c22.html

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

American cougars on the decline: 'We’re running against the clock,' says big cat expert

Morgan Erickson-Davis, MONGABAY.COM
January 17, 201

It holds the Guinness World Record for having the most names of any animal on the planet, with 40 in English alone. It's also the widest-ranging native land animal in the Americas, yet is declining throughout much of its range. Mongabay talks with big cat expert Dr. Howard Quigley about the status and research implications of the elusive, enigmatic, and unique cougar.

It is thought that the forebear of the cougar migrated from Asia into North America over the Bering land bridge approximately 8 million years ago, where it evolved into the different cat lineages present today. Cougars subsequently invaded South America three million years ago when the isthmus of Panama formed to connect the two continents. Genetic studies have shown that today's North American populations are all very similar, suggesting a population bottleneck contemporaneous with the megafauna extinction of approximately 10,000 years ago during which large North American mammals such as Smilodon went extinct. Researchers believe that during this time cougars were largely or entirely extirpated from the whole of the continent, with today's populations refounded by cougars from South American.

Although it can weigh up to 220 pounds, making it the second largest felid in the Americas (after the jaguar), the cougar is actually more related to smaller cat species such as ocelots and lynx than it is to lions and tigers. Originally, it was even grouped in the same genus as the domestic cat (Felis), but in 1993 was given its own genus, Puma, which it shares with its closest living relative, the jaguarundi.

Interestingly, even though they are in separate subfamilies, cougars and leopards are capable of hybridizing. In the 1890s and early 1900s, an animal park in Germany bred a female cougar with a male leopard while a Berlin zoo bred a male puma to a female leopard. The resulting "pumapards" had the long body of a cougar with the rosettes of a leopard on a tawny or grey coat. Most died while young, and those that did reach adulthood grew to be only half the size of their parents due to genetic dwarfism.

With habitat extending from the Yukon to the Andes, the cougar is the widest ranging land animal in the Americas due to their ability to live in virtually any environment. However, even with their vast range, there are estimated to be only 50,000 wild cougars in the world.

In South and Central America, laws enacted in 1996 outlawed the hunting of cougars in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, French Guiana, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Suriname, Venezuela, and Uruguay. Cougars have no protection measures in place in Ecuador, El Salvador, and Guyana.

In North America, cougars became extirpated from most of the Eastern U.S. and Canada after European colonization. The only resident eastern population is the critically endangered Florida panther which occupies only five percent of its historic range and numbers just 50-100 individuals. Many states and provinces in the western portions of the U.S. and Canada have resident cougar populations, and all except California and the Yukon allow hunting. However, most have enacted certain protection measures. The lone exception is Texas, where hunting of the cats in largely unregulated. The state groups cougars with ticks and pigeons as "nuisance wildlife", and allows anyone with a hunting or trapping permit to kill a cougar regardless of sex, size, or age.

Cougars are threatened by habitat loss and by direct persecution by humans. The latter is primarily caused by the perceived threat of cougars on livestock, although the risk of attacks on humans is sometimes used to justify the killing of a cougar near urban areas. In reality, cougars have a minuscule effect on livestock numbers. In Texas in 1990, for example, cougar kills amounted to 445 sheep (0.02 percent of a total of the state's total of 2.0 million sheep and lambs) and 86 calves (0.0006 percent of the state's total of 13.4 million cattle and calves).

Attacks on people are incredibly rare, but are increasing due to expansion of human populations into cougar habitat. In the hundred years spanning 1890 to 1990, there were only 53 confirmed attacks by cougars on humans, resulting in ten deaths. From 1990 to 2004, the number of attacks had climbed to 88 with a total of 20 deaths. Even though the frequency of attacks on humans is relatively small, those which do happen are heavily covered by the media, effectively maligning cougars in the public eye and drawing attention away from the critical roles they play in many ecosystems.

However, the main reason behind cougar decline in the U.S. is habitat loss through degradation and fragmentation. Research shows that cougars need at least 850 square miles of uninterrupted habitat in order to persist with only a low risk of extinction. With urban areas becoming more numerous, many scientists are calling for the expansion of protected habitat corridors so that cougar populations could exist and move without needing to traverse through civilization.

One of the major players in cougar conservation is Panthera, an organization whose mission is to ensure the future of wild cats through scientific leadership and global conservation action. Panthera is the world's largest dedicated funder of wild cat conservation, and in addition to cougars includes tigers, lions, cheetahs, leopards, snow leopards, and jaguars as its focal species. Panthera has sponsored many innovative conservation measures such as the Jaguar Corridor, a program that is working to connect jaguar habitats from the top of their range at the Mexican-American border all the way down to the end of their range in Northern Argentina, and the Snow Leopard Initiative which was launched in Beijing in 2008.

Panthera is currently conducting two projects which focus on cougar conservation: the California Cougar Project and the Teton Cougar Project. The Teton Cougar Project, a joint Panthera-Craighead Beringia South initiative in its ninth year, is working to gather data about the cougar population of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem with the aim of increasing knowledge of cougar population dynamics and interactions with competing carnivores and humans.

Full article at: http://news.mongabay.com/2011/0117-morgan_cougar_quigley.html

American cougars on the decline: 'We’re running against the clock,' says big cat expert

Morgan Erickson-Davis, MONGABAY.COM
January 17, 201

It holds the Guinness World Record for having the most names of any animal on the planet, with 40 in English alone. It's also the widest-ranging native land animal in the Americas, yet is declining throughout much of its range. Mongabay talks with big cat expert Dr. Howard Quigley about the status and research implications of the elusive, enigmatic, and unique cougar.

It is thought that the forebear of the cougar migrated from Asia into North America over the Bering land bridge approximately 8 million years ago, where it evolved into the different cat lineages present today. Cougars subsequently invaded South America three million years ago when the isthmus of Panama formed to connect the two continents. Genetic studies have shown that today's North American populations are all very similar, suggesting a population bottleneck contemporaneous with the megafauna extinction of approximately 10,000 years ago during which large North American mammals such as Smilodon went extinct. Researchers believe that during this time cougars were largely or entirely extirpated from the whole of the continent, with today's populations refounded by cougars from South American.

Although it can weigh up to 220 pounds, making it the second largest felid in the Americas (after the jaguar), the cougar is actually more related to smaller cat species such as ocelots and lynx than it is to lions and tigers. Originally, it was even grouped in the same genus as the domestic cat (Felis), but in 1993 was given its own genus, Puma, which it shares with its closest living relative, the jaguarundi.

Interestingly, even though they are in separate subfamilies, cougars and leopards are capable of hybridizing. In the 1890s and early 1900s, an animal park in Germany bred a female cougar with a male leopard while a Berlin zoo bred a male puma to a female leopard. The resulting "pumapards" had the long body of a cougar with the rosettes of a leopard on a tawny or grey coat. Most died while young, and those that did reach adulthood grew to be only half the size of their parents due to genetic dwarfism.

With habitat extending from the Yukon to the Andes, the cougar is the widest ranging land animal in the Americas due to their ability to live in virtually any environment. However, even with their vast range, there are estimated to be only 50,000 wild cougars in the world.

In South and Central America, laws enacted in 1996 outlawed the hunting of cougars in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, French Guiana, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Suriname, Venezuela, and Uruguay. Cougars have no protection measures in place in Ecuador, El Salvador, and Guyana.

In North America, cougars became extirpated from most of the Eastern U.S. and Canada after European colonization. The only resident eastern population is the critically endangered Florida panther which occupies only five percent of its historic range and numbers just 50-100 individuals. Many states and provinces in the western portions of the U.S. and Canada have resident cougar populations, and all except California and the Yukon allow hunting. However, most have enacted certain protection measures. The lone exception is Texas, where hunting of the cats in largely unregulated. The state groups cougars with ticks and pigeons as "nuisance wildlife", and allows anyone with a hunting or trapping permit to kill a cougar regardless of sex, size, or age.

Cougars are threatened by habitat loss and by direct persecution by humans. The latter is primarily caused by the perceived threat of cougars on livestock, although the risk of attacks on humans is sometimes used to justify the killing of a cougar near urban areas. In reality, cougars have a minuscule effect on livestock numbers. In Texas in 1990, for example, cougar kills amounted to 445 sheep (0.02 percent of a total of the state's total of 2.0 million sheep and lambs) and 86 calves (0.0006 percent of the state's total of 13.4 million cattle and calves).

Attacks on people are incredibly rare, but are increasing due to expansion of human populations into cougar habitat. In the hundred years spanning 1890 to 1990, there were only 53 confirmed attacks by cougars on humans, resulting in ten deaths. From 1990 to 2004, the number of attacks had climbed to 88 with a total of 20 deaths. Even though the frequency of attacks on humans is relatively small, those which do happen are heavily covered by the media, effectively maligning cougars in the public eye and drawing attention away from the critical roles they play in many ecosystems.

However, the main reason behind cougar decline in the U.S. is habitat loss through degradation and fragmentation. Research shows that cougars need at least 850 square miles of uninterrupted habitat in order to persist with only a low risk of extinction. With urban areas becoming more numerous, many scientists are calling for the expansion of protected habitat corridors so that cougar populations could exist and move without needing to traverse through civilization.

One of the major players in cougar conservation is Panthera, an organization whose mission is to ensure the future of wild cats through scientific leadership and global conservation action. Panthera is the world's largest dedicated funder of wild cat conservation, and in addition to cougars includes tigers, lions, cheetahs, leopards, snow leopards, and jaguars as its focal species. Panthera has sponsored many innovative conservation measures such as the Jaguar Corridor, a program that is working to connect jaguar habitats from the top of their range at the Mexican-American border all the way down to the end of their range in Northern Argentina, and the Snow Leopard Initiative which was launched in Beijing in 2008.

Panthera is currently conducting two projects which focus on cougar conservation: the California Cougar Project and the Teton Cougar Project. The Teton Cougar Project, a joint Panthera-Craighead Beringia South initiative in its ninth year, is working to gather data about the cougar population of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem with the aim of increasing knowledge of cougar population dynamics and interactions with competing carnivores and humans.

Full article at: http://news.mongabay.com/2011/0117-morgan_cougar_quigley.html

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Mountain lion sighted in Red Bluff, California

By Record Searchlight staff
Posted August 27, 2010 at 2:06 p.m.

A Red Bluff woman reported seeing a mountain lion in Red Bluff near Forward Park.

The woman, who was not identified, told police that she was looking out her bedroom window shortly before 9 a.m. and saw a mountain lion walking along an access road behind her residence, according to Red Bluff police.

The woman said she lives on Lassen View Drive near the park. Police checked the area for the mountain lion but were unable to find it, according to a news release.

Thursday's sighting was the fourth in a month, police said. Police have asked anyone who sees a mountain lion in the Red Bluff vicinity to call 527-3131.

http://www.redding.com/news/2010/aug/27/mountain-lion-sighted-red-bluff/

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Local Couple Spots Cougar In Lake Elmo (Via D R Shoop)

http://wcco.com/pets/cougar.spotted.lake.2.1786721.html
Local Couple Spots Cougar In Lake Elmo

Map
http://tinyurl.com/34whdj4

A Lake Elmo couple said they spotted a cougar just outside their home on Saturday. Cathy Arnfeldt said she and her husband spotted the cougar along the 12000 block of 12th Street North in Lake Elmo. She said the cougar was between 150 and 175 pounds. The cougar quickly left the area and was not seen again. The Washington County Sheriff's Department said they didn't get any physical evidence of a cougar at the scene but are relying on the citizen report that it most likely happened. A Washington County Sheriff sergeant said they've had other recent sightings of a cougar around the area. The Stillwater Gazette reports that a few people saw a cougar around Lily Lake on Friday, which is about six to 10 miles south of where Arnfeldt said she saw the cougar on Saturday.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Confirmed: Big cats prowl in Ontario (Via Andrew Gibson)

Confirmed: Big cats prowl in Ontario
Tracks, scat and DNA lay to rest any doubt that cougars exist here

Raveena Aulakh
Staff Reporter
Mon Jun 21 2010

It’s really, truly official: Cougars in Ontario are fact, not fable.

A definitive four-year study by the Ministry of Natural Resources has finally put a rest to all doubt that the big but reclusive cats prowl the province’s wilderness.

“Cougars have been here all along . . . we are collecting additional information about them now,” said Rick Rosatte, a senior research scientist in Peterborough. More than 30 pieces of evidence have been collected, including photos of tracks, DNA and scat samples that verify the big cat’s presence.

Of the roughly 2,000 reported sightings in the province since 2002, very few have been confirmed by track marks or DNA. Ontario’s original population was thought to have been hunted out of existence in the late 1800s. The last cougar shot here was found in 1884 near Creemore, south of Collingwood.

Rosatte says the study begun in 2006 has had three phases: investigating potential sightings; examining tissue, scat or DNA; and setting up cameras across the province — including at Kenora, Lindsay and Sault Ste. Marie, where the last confirmed sightings occurred.

He interviews people who think they’ve spotted a cougar, tries to determine the animal’s size and, when it sounds really promising, sets up trail cameras triggered by motion and heat. Dozens have been set up, but there are no photos yet. “We are hoping for photos, but cougars travel a lot and they travel very fast,” said Rosatte.

The cats, also known as pumas and mountain lions depending on region, can travel up to 50 kilometres a night, within a territory ranging up to 1,000 square kilometers.

But the big question about the natural-born killers with a muscular saunter, is: Where did they come from?

“Were they always here? Are these native cougars? Are they coming from the west? Or are these released captive animals?” said Rosatte. “It’s intriguing.”

He doesn’t think there’s a large population but declined to put a number to it. “I don’t think it’s substantial,” he said.

Stuart Kenn, president of Ontario Puma Foundation, who has been tracking the elusive animal for three decades, estimates there are 550 cougars in Ontario. There appears to be a “cougar corridor” bordered by Ottawa, Peterborough and Owen Sound to the south and North Bay, Sudbury and Sault Ste. Marie to the north.

“The best way to study these animals is to track them down with dogs,” Kenn said. “But since the province has listed them as endangered, we can’t do that.”

The foundation, which shares data with the ministry, has already developed a recovery plan that, among other things, encourages protecting large wilderness tracts where cougars prowl.

But while cougars are out there in the wilderness, there’s no need to worry, said Kenn. In Ontario, “There’s never been a confirmed attack on a human by a cougar. It’s very, very rare.”

http://www.thestar.com/news/ontario/article/826635

Monday, June 21, 2010

Cougar on the prowl near Morden

RIGHT: A file photo by Linda Dyck of the cougar spotted in her yard near Plum Coulee in May, 2008.
Conservation officials suggest healthy deer population attracting the predator

By Lorne Stelmach

Local and provincial officials have been on the lookout for a cougar sighted on the west end of Morden.

The Morden Police Service and Manitoba Conservation are working together after having received a number of cougar sightings in the region.

The sightings are unconfirmed because no physical evidence — be it tracks, hair or scat — has been found, said Bill Watkins, a wildlife biologist in Manitoba Conservation's wildlife and ecosystem protection branch.

Watkins said one of two people who reported a sighting has been interviewed. That person claimed to have seen the wild animal on a trail next to a creek on Morden's west side Saturday at 7 a.m., Watkins said.

Morden resident Howard Reichert said he spotted a cougar on the edge of a coulee southwest of Morden earlier this spring.

Attracted by deer

Officials believe they have a good idea of what has lured the cougar into an area which is out of the predator's typical known range - a healthy deer population.

"The increased deer population in Morden may be, as a result of people feeding the deer over the winter," said Sgt. Brent Menzies. "This is an offset result of the deer population becoming accustomed to the human population as a source of food."

As a result, Menzies added that they are"working with Manitoba Conservation to find a way to move the deer population out of the area."

Presence known

Although Manitoba is not part of the cougar's typical range, the animal's presence in the province is certain.

Just ask Linda and Abe Dyck, who captured a photo of a cougar that passed through their Plum Coulee area yard in May, 2008.

"It is beyond doubt that cougars have been seen in Manitoba," reported Bill Watkins, a zoologist with the Wildlife and Ecosystem Protection Branch of Manitoba Conservation.

"Many credible sightings are reported every year, and the occasional hair sample or track confirms the presence of this predator," stated Watkins. "Unfortunately, we may never know the original source of Manitoba's cougars."

He said Manitoba Conservation averages about one confirmed sighting a year now.

While the animals are rarely seen, that doesn?t mean they restrict themselves to specific habitats.

"They are 'generalists' - mountains, prairies, deserts, rain forests. In the mountains, they're called mountain lions. In Florida, panthers, in deserts areas like the American southwest, pumas.

"Cougars normally have very large ranges and it's not uncommon for them to pass through inhabited areas," Watkins explained, adding "but they are very elusive and are rarely seen."

Cougars don't normally stay in one area for any length of time, Watkins continued, adding, however, a pregnant female will find and stay in a safe place while she gives birth and cares for her kittens.

Deer and larger animals like elk are definitely on a cougar's menu, and Watkins said the animal in question may well have been following deer reported in the area.

What you need to know

Cougars are a protected species in Manitoba, so it is illegal to deliberately kill them.

However, police and conservation officials this week offered area residents some information on what they need to know and what precautions they can take:
  • Cougars are transient and will only stay in an area for a short time.
  • They follow the deer population as a source of food.
  • When they make a kill, they will usually drag the deer into the bush and bury the animal to return later to eat it.
  • Cougars can usually be found in wooded areas up a tree.
  • They are not attracted to compost materials or garbage.
  • People should make some noise if going into a wooded area or walking secluded pathways. And it is best to stay away from creeks in those areas.
So what should you do if you encounter a cougar?

Obviously, leave it alone. Don't run because you'll look too much like prey. Back slowly away from it and make yourself appear as large as possible. That's usually enough to make the animal think twice about getting aggressive with you, said Watkins.

If the cougar does show signs of aggression and appears to be stalking you, make lots of noise, throw rocks and sticks at it. If you have a child with you, pick up the child (to prevent the child from running). Plus it also makes you look bigger.

"Generally speaking, respect the animal, but do not fear it," Watkins said.

"Cougar attacks (on people) are very rare," Watkins said, adding Manitoba has never had a reported cougar attack.

-- with files from Don Radford and the Winnipeg Sun

http://www.mordentimes.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2613904
(Submitted by Chad Arment)

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Mountain lion shot near Big Bear school (Via Paul Cropper)

Mountain lion shot near Big Bear school
RICHARD BROOKS
THE PRESS-ENTERPRISE
7 May 2010
The Press-Enterprise
© 2010 The Press-Enterprise. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Deputies shot a mountain lion Thursday near a school beside Big Bear Lake just days after the same cat killed a dog in the area and another lion treed a Lake Arrowhead jogger, officials say. "If you live in mountain or foothill communities in Southern California, there's a possibility of a mountain lion showing up at any time," warns California Department of Fish & Game biologist Kevin Brennan. "Usually, they'll go after a pet or livestock before they'll go after a person."

A motorist summoned a deputy sheriff early Thursday after spotting a mountain lion crossing North Shore Drive in a residential area and near a school along the east end of Big Bear Lake. The sighting was only about a mile from where a mountain lion killed a pet dog Friday along Panamint Mountain Drive, said Brennan.

Deputies killed the animal at 9:35 a.m.

Authorities said the critter was an obviously underweight female weighing about 70 pounds. "Our on-scene biologist is of the opinion that it's definitely the same lion that killed the dog on Friday," said Brennan, who told of two other sightings since then. "Last night, the county trapper was out there with the hounds, but he was unable to find the lion. It obviously has been frequenting the area since it killed the dog."

About 30 miles to the east, what is believed to be a different mountain lion chased and tried to attack a female jogger Tuesday near the Willow Creek Treatment Plant in the forest along the north shore of Lake Arrowhead.
"There was a standoff. She backed away and sought refuge in a tree," said Brennan, who could only guess why the animal didn't climb the tree after her. "Maybe because she was shaking a stick at it and squirting water at it."
Workers from the water treatment plant heard her screams and drove to help her, scaring away the animal.
A federal hunter and his hounds were assigned to kill the animal, but the dogs couldn't find the scene. And the big cat didn't return to the area, though authorities set out animal carcasses as lures, Brennan said.

As a result, officials have called off the hunt.

"We don't have any indication that there's a mountain lion still in the area," Brennan said. "It can no longer be considered an imminent threat to public safety." Anyone confronted by a mountain lion or bear should resist the urge to run and, instead, try to appear exceptionally large and intimidating by raising their arms over their head or spreading open their jacket or shirt, Brennan said.

"If you are attacked by a wild animal, fight back," he said. "People have successfully repelled mountain lions with whatever they had at hand: baseball caps, cups, jackets." The motorist who spotted the ill-fated lion near Big Bear Lake says such sightings are becoming increasingly common. "They (seldom) come into the populated areas," said Ray Bowling, of 31-year resident of Big Bear City and a north shore business owner. "But in the last couple of years, I've started to see them."

He believes deputies had to open fire on the Big Bear Lake mountain lion because it was in a residential area near an elementary school and had repeatedly returned to the neighborhood after killing the dog. "The deputies were pretty brave to run down in front of this animal and keep it from escaping," Bowling said. "They put themselves in harms way."

Reach Richard Brooks at 951-368-9463 or rbrooks@PE.com