New West Feature
In Colorado, Hunting Mountain Lions to Help Desert Bighorns
Wildlife officers are trying to help a herd of bighorn sheep in Colorado's Big Gypsum Valley for the third time since 1990. This time, officers will increase the herd's odds by hunting any mountain lions that kill a sheep.By Kylee Perez
The DOW believes that past attempts at creating a successful herd in this area were thwarted by mountain lion predation. This time, the herd will be receive additional help from the DOW in the form of predator control. Wildlife officers will monitor local mountain lions to ensure they aren't preying on any of the sheep in the area. Those that do will be killed. Although the mountain lion population in Western Colorado is very robust, said Joe Lewandowski, spokesperson for the Colorado Division of Wildlife, the Big Gypsum Valley is not prime mountain lion habitat because it doesn't support a large population of mule deer, the lions' primary food source.
If a mountain lion does kill a sheep, it will hide the carcass and continually come back to it to feed. Wildlife officers can use the signal from the radio collar that each sheep wears to find the lion and be sure they only kill the culprit animal. The predator control policy will be in place for the next two years. "It's not something we go into lightly," said Lewandowski said of hunting mountain lions that prey on the herd. "If we (aren't) sure we're not just going to go out there and start looking for lions." These steps are necessary to help the herd increase its population because the bighorn sheep are not a particularly prolific species like deer. Their dry habitat makes it difficult to produce a lot of offspring who will then compete for limited resources. "Over the century, we've had lots of encroachment into wildlife habitat and animals were hunted and trapped," Lewandowski said. "We want to give these critters a good fighting chance."
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