ST. LOUIS (AP) — Cougars are again spreading across the Midwest a century
after the generally reclusive predators were hunted to near extinction in
much of the region, according to a new study billed as the first rigorous
statistical look at the issue.
The findings, detailed in The Journal of Wildlife Management, showed 178
cougar confirmations in the Midwest and as far south as Texas between 1990
and 2008. While confirmed sightings of Midwest cougars were sporadic before
1990, when there were only a couple, that number spiked to more than 30 by
2008, the study shows.
Researchers said the study poses fresh questions about how humans and
livestock can co-exist with the re-emerging predators, whose movements
appear to be following natural dispersal instincts.
The study sorts through various reported sightings and affixes a number to
those it could confirm, which is significant because no government agency
tracks the number of large cats across the country. Wildlife officials have
for years said it’s unclear how many of the animals may be in the Midwest,
where they are not federally protected and, in some states, can be hunted.
“We (now) know there are a heck of a lot more cougars running around the
Midwest than in 1990,” said Clay Nielsen, a Southern Illinois University
wildlife ecologist who co-authored the report while heading the nonprofit
Cougar Network’s scientific research. “We’ve got an interesting and
compelling picture to talk about now.
“For those who are excited about the notion of living with large carnivores,
this is great,” Nielsen added. “For those worried about livestock
degradations, there’s going to be division in the ranks in the Midwest. It’s
going to be interesting to see how the public responds if this colonizing
continues.”
In the study, researchers relied on carcasses, cougar DNA from scat and hair
samples, animal tracks, photos, video and instances of attacks on livestock
across 14 states and Canadian provinces to measure the number of cougars
east of the Rocky Mountains.
Scientists long had suspected that cougars were migrating from the West or
South Dakota’s Black Hills mountain range, where populations of the big,
long-tailed cats have been so abundant that the state has staged a yearly
hunting season targeting mountain lions since 2005. The study excluded
confirmations from the Black Hills, given that state’s bounty of the cats.
Of the cougar confirmations by researchers, roughly 62 percent took place
within some 12 miles of habitat considered suitable for the animals’
populations. Sixty-seven of the confirmations were in Nebraska, 31 in North
Dakota, 12 each in Oklahoma and Texas, 11 in South Dakota and 10 in
Missouri. Single-digit tallies were in Arkansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Iowa,
Illinois, Wisconsin, Kansas and Michigan.
Researchers theorize cougars are inhabiting the Midwest again following a
“stepping stone” dispersal pattern — moving out of a dense population,
stopping at the closest patch of available habitat and examining it for
mates and prey before moving on. One male cougar made its way as far as
Connecticut, where it was hit and killed by a vehicle.
Such cougar dispersal “is what they’re programmed to do. Young mammals, even
young humans, tend to move away from home,” said Paul Beier, a Northern
Arizona University conservation biology professor who studies cougars. “They
once occupied the midwestern U.S. There’s still some appropriate habitat,
and this is how they’ll find it.”
Cougars are known to be largely secretive and mostly keep to riverbanks and
wooded areas, usually avoiding humans while feeding on deer, turkeys and
raccoons.
But at times, the predators have drifted into populated areas. Police in
Santa Monica, Calif., last month killed a 95-pound mountain lion that roamed
into a downtown area — the first such sighting in that city in more than
three decades — and Chicago police in 2008 shot and killed a 150-pound
cougar in an alley on the city’s North Side.
The study’s findings come as little surprise to Bill Jorgenson, a North
Dakotan who came face to face in January of last year with a 130-pound
female cougar and her three cubs in a storage barn on his property, where he
has 20 horses and some 1,000 head of cattle.
Fearing for his safety, Jorgenson shot and killed the animals.
“They’re so thick out here, it’s unbelievable,” Jorgenson, 58, said of the
mountain lions he blames for “wiping out” the deer population around his
home near the 1,700-resident town of Watford City. “Two years ago, it’d be
nothing to see 200 to 300 mule deer out there; this past winter, we never
saw more than 20. We have carcasses all over where they’ve been killed.”
Missouri’s Department of Conservation said recently the 14 confirmed cougar
sightings in that state this year compares to a dozen cougars confirmed
there over the previous 16 years.
Since 1996, Missouri has deployed a specially trained, evidence-collecting
“Mountain Lion Response Team” of wildlife experts, law enforcers and
biologists whenever there’s a credible sighting of cougars.
The Associated Press
A newly released study by a University of Minnesota doctoral student, a
Southern Illinois University wildlife ecologist and the research-minded
Cougar Network says 178 scientific confirmations of cougars have been
documented in the 14 largely Midwestern states and some Canadian provinces
from 1990 to 2008. Here’s the study’s breakdown of those confirmations by
state:
—Nebraska, 67
—North Dakota, 31
—Oklahoma, 12
—Texas, 12
—South Dakota, 11
—Missouri, 10
—Arkansas, 8
—Louisiana, 5
—Minnesota, 5
—Iowa, 4
—Illinois, 3
—Wisconsin, 2
—Kansas, 1
—Michigan, 1