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Save The Mountain Lion

There once was a man from Yuma...Played a practical joke on a Puma...Now his bleached, dried bones l

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The Mountain Lion is the most widely distributed cat in the Americas (found from Canada to Argentina), the Mountain Lion is a solitary, strongly territorial hunting species. Unlike most cats, it hunts day or night, although it is generally active by day only in undisturbed areas, choosing to hunt at night in populated areas to avoid humans. A good climber and excellent jumper, able to leap more than 20 feet (6 m), this animal swims only when necessary. It feeds primarily on large mammals, especially deer, but also eats Coyotes, porcupines, beavers, mice, marmots, hares, raccoons, birds, and even grasshoppers. Sometimes it waits for passing game, but more often it travels widely after prey; a male may cover up to 25 miles (40 km) in one night. It can outrun a deer, but only for short distances. After locating large prey by scent or sound, it usually slinks forward slowly and silently, with belly low to the ground and legs tensed to leap. It tries to stalk within 30 feet (9 m) before running from its hiding place and leaping onto its victim’s back, keeping its hindlegs on the ground for support, control, and stability. The Mountain Lion kills its prey by biting into the back of the victim’s neck. Where deer abound, an adult Mountain Lion may kill an average of one per week. (This is often beneficial to the deer herd, helping to keep it from overpopulating.) There have been rare, unexplained killing orgies, when an individual has slaughtered several deer or a flock of domestic sheep in one night. This carnivore covers the meat it does not eat immediately with leaves, sticks, and like material for later use, and may visit the cache several times. Usually silent, the Mountain Lion can produce many kinds of calls, including screams, hisses, and growls. It also utters a shrill, piercing whistle, evidently an alarm, when it has been treed or cornered; a female uses this whistle to signal her cubs. The Mountain Lion’s bloodcurdling mating call has been likened to a woman’s scream. The male has a large home range that does not overlap with that of another male; the female has a smaller one that may overlap with those of other females and may be enclosed by that of a male. The home range of a male (and sometimes of a female) is marked by "scrapes," piles of dirt kicked up by the hindfeet. The Mountain Lion breeds at two and a half years, then generally every other year thereafter. The young are born in a maternity den that is lined with a small amount of moss or other vegetation and located in a rock shelter, crevice, pile of rocks, thicket, cave, or other protected place. The newborn cubs, heavily spotted for the first three months of life, are raised only by the female. At about three months, the young are weaned and begin hunting with the mother. Mother and young, who remain together for about a year and a half, communicate by licking, rubbing, and vocalizing. The young produce loud chirping whistles. A female Mountain Lion can breed until at least 12 years of age, a male to at least 20. These animals pair only during the breeding season, when for about two weeks male and female hunt together and sleep side by side.”© Charles G. Summers, Jr.

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Recent Mountain Lion Attack in California - My thoughts

Have you heard about the recent Mountain Lion Attack on a couple in California? It happened January 15th 2007 in a State Park in Northern California. No one was killed but the man who was attacked is ...
Posted by Save The Mountain Lion on Mon, 05 Feb 2007 11:08:00 PST

Cougar Reports on the Rise in Eastern U.S.

By Cameron Walkerfor National Geographic News March 7, 2003   At one time, spotting a cougar in the eastern United States ranked alongside an encounter with Bigfoot or a UFO. But over the years,...
Posted by Save The Mountain Lion on Wed, 10 Jan 2007 07:32:00 PST

Trophy Hunting of Mountain Lions: A History of Deception

Between 1916 and 1971, more than 12,000 mountain lions were killed for bounties and for sport in California. It was common to hear tall tales about the prowess of hunters who single-handedly brought d...
Posted by Save The Mountain Lion on Wed, 10 Jan 2007 07:23:00 PST

Coexisting with Mountain Lions

Cougars are ambush predators, which means they depend upon stealth and the element of surprise to capture their preyprimarily deer and elk, the occasional porcupine or moose, or at times such smaller...
Posted by Save The Mountain Lion on Mon, 08 Jan 2007 11:55:00 PST