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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Sunday, March 13, 2011

THE HISTORY OF MOUNTAIN LION BOUNTIES IN AMERICA.............FAST AND FURIOIUS RESPONSE BY EUROPEAN SETTLERS TO RID THEIR LANDS OF OUR NATIVE "PAINTER/CATAMOUNT/PUMA/COUGAR/MOUNTAIN LION!

AMERICA'S MOUNTAIN LION BOUNTY AND SPORT HUNTING HISTORY
1500s
  •   Spanish explorer Cabeza de Vaca observes a mountain lion in Florida, becoming perhaps the first European in North America to see one.
  •     Jesuit priests in Southern California offer a bounty of one bull to Native Americans for every mountain lion killed.
1684
  •     Connecticut offers a bounty of twenty shillings apiece for the killing of catamounts.
1742
  •     Massachusetts enacts a bounty on mountain lions.
1807
  •     Pennsylvania enacts a bounty on mountain lions.
1843
  •     The Oregon Territory Legislature classifies cougars as a "predator" and enacts a bounty. For the next ninety years, an annual bounty on 200 or more cougars was not uncommon.
1845
  •     The last known mountain lion in Ohio is killed.
1850
  • Due to extermination by humans, mountain lion are now considered as rare in the eastern two-thirds of the continent.
  •     The last documented report of a wild mountain lion in Indiana occurs sometime between 1850 and 1865.
1852
  •   First account of mountain lions being killed by Americans in southwestern Oklahoma.
1855
  •     Last known mountain lion killed in Illinois.
1858
  •     The last known catamount in Massachusetts is reported killed.
1867
  •     Last known mountain lion in Iowa is killed.
1881
  •     Alexander Crowell kills the last known catamount in Vermont.
  •     Colorado classifies mountain lions as a "predator" with a bounty offered for every mountain lion killed.
1888
  •   The Utah Territorial Legislature classifies mountain lions as an "obnoxious animal."
1890
  •     Last known mountain lion in Nebraska is killed.
1891
  •     The last mountain lion in Pennsylvania is reported killed.
1896
  •     The Utah Territorial Legislature establishes a bounty system on mountain lions.
1899
  • The same year South Dakota becomes a state, its legislature enacts a bounty on mountain lions.
1900
  • Except for a small population in Florida, mountain lions are effectively extirpated in states east of the Mississippi River.
1903
  •     Montana classifies mountain lions as a "bountied predator".
1904
  •     The last verified mountain lion in Kansas is killed in Ellis County.
1905
  •     Washington enacts a bounty on cougars.
  •      Mountain lions are extirpated from South Dakota. The state will not be recolonized with a breeding pair from Wyoming until the early 1970s.
1907
  •     California classifies mountain lions as a "bountied predator."
1908
  •     Mountain lions are considered extirpated in Wisconsin (the Badger State).

  •     The last know catamount in New York is reported killed.

1911
  •   Oregon sets its cougar bounty at $10.
1914
  •     Idaho enacts a bounty on mountain lions.
1915
  •   Idaho initiates a cooperative eradication program with the Federal Government and private livestock associations to employ hunters to kill mountain lions.
1917
  •   A Federal control program, administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is initiated in Utah to protect livestock by killing mountain lions.
1918
  •   The Territorial Legislature of Arizona classifies mountain lions as a "undesirable predator." By 1947, 2,400 mountain lions will have been killed.
1923
  •   New Mexico ends its mountain lion bounty program.
1927
  •     Last known mountain lion in Missouri is killed.
1929
  •     Colorado enacts a bounty on mountain lions.
1931
  • Congress passes the Animal Damage Control Act, giving the Secretary of Agriculture broad authority to expand "the destruction of mountain lions, wolves, coyotes, bobcats, prairie dogs, gophers, ground squirrels, jackrabbits, and other animals injurious to agriculture, horticulture, forestry, husbandry, game, or domestic animals, or that carried disease."
1932
  •   Utah discontinues the issuance of bounties on mountain lions for the next 12-years.
1938
  •     The last know mountain lion in Maine is reported killed.
1939
  •   Oregon increases the bounty paid for cougars from $10 to $50.
1941
  •   Between 1915 and 1941, hunters employed cooperatively by the State, livestock associations, and the Federal Government killed 251 mountain lions in Idaho as part of a program to protect livestock in that state. The number of mountain lions killed by private individuals is not known.
1943
  •     Utah reestablishes its bounty program on mountain lions.
1945
  •   Idaho offers a $50 bounty for every mountain lion killed and turned into the State. Over the next 14 years an annual average of 80 mountain lions were turned in for payment.
1947
  •     Since 1918, 2,400 mountain lions have been killed as "undesirable predators." In an effort to accelerate the extirpation of the species, Arizona enacts a bounty on mountain lions varying from $50 to $100 per lion. By 1969, an additional 5,400 cougars will have been killed and turned in for the bounty.
1950
  •   Florida classifies panthers as "game animals."
1953
  •   Idaho's 1953-54 winter period yielded that state's highest recorded bounty harvest of 144 mountain lions.
1955
  •   Idaho reduces the bounty paid on mountain lions to $25.
1958
  •   Florida passes legislation to protect its panther population.
  •   The Idaho State Legislature stops its lion bounty program and allows the unregulated hunting of mountain lions. Since 1918 (first year records are available) an incomplete record shows that at least 1,479 mountain lions were killed and turned in for the bounty.
1959
  •   Utah ends its bounty program on mountain lions. Since 1913 (first year records are available) 3,895 mountain lions were killed and turned in for the bounty.
1960
  •   It is estimated that Oregon's cougar population has dropped to only 200 animals.
  •   While still listed as an official program, Washington stops offering a bounty on cougars.
1961
  •   The last 28 cougars are turned in for the bounty in Oregon before the state discontinues that program for lack of cougars. Since 1918 (first year records are available) 6,762 cougars were killed and turned in for the bounty.
1962
  •   Washington officially rescinds its cougar bounty program. Since 1936 (first date records available) 3,143 cougars were killed and turned in for the bounty.
1963
  •   Montana ends its bounty program on mountain lions and reclassifies them as "predator" with no bounty offered. During the bounty program's 61-year history, at least 1,897 mountain lions were reported killed and turned in to government agents for the reward.
  •   California ends its bounty program on mountain lions and reclassifies them as a "non-protected mammal." During its 57-year history, California's mountain lion bounty program accounted for a record 12,461 mountain lions killed and turned in for the bounty. (For more information see California Mountain Lion Bounty Timeline)
1965
  •   Colorado discontinues its mountain lion bounty program and reclassifies the animal as a "big game species." Between 1917 (the first year records are available) and 1965, 1,754 mountain lions were killed and turned in to government agents for a reward.
  •   Nevada reclassifies mountain lions as a "game animal." Unlike most western states, Nevada never placed a statewide bounty on mountain lions. They were considered "unprotected predators" until their classification as game animals.
1966
  •   Washington reclassifies cougars as a "game animal."
  •   South Dakota discontinues its bounty program on mountain lions. Since 1906 only two mountain lions have been reported as killed in South Dakota (1931 & 1959).
  • Congress passes the Endangered Species Preservation Act
1967
  •   Oregon reclassifies cougars as "game animal."
  •   The Florida Panther is placed on the State Endangered Species List

  •   Utah reclassifies mountain lions as a "game animal" and hunting regulations were established that allowed the taking of any number of mountain lions at any time. At the time, residents did not need a permit to hunt mountain lions.
1969
  •   California reclassifies mountain lions as a "game mammal." This action was undertaken to control supposed livestock damage and to "manage" mountain lions through regulated hunting.
  • Thought to be extinct in Arkansas, an adult mountain lion is killed approximately 6 miles east of Hamburg, in Ashley County.
1970
  •   Arizona reclassifies mountain lions as "big game animals," but maintains its bounty law as a non-funded program until its repeal in 1990.
  • California's first mountain lion hunting season occurs with 35 mountain lions reported killed.
  • Between 1937 and 1970, federal employees of Animal Damage Control (ADC), derisively branded "All Dead Critters" by some of their critics, are credited with killing 7,255 cougars.
1971
  •   New Mexico reclassifies mountain lions as a "game mammal."
  •   Montana reclassifies mountain lions as a "game animal" and establishes a regulated hunting season.
  •   California holds its second mountain lion hunting season with 83 mountain lions reported killed.
  •   The California legislature passes new legislation, signed by then governor, Ronald Reagan which placed a moratorium on the sport hunting of mountain lions. The lion hunting moratorium, is slated to start on March 1, 1972.
  •   Arizona reclassifies mountain lions as a "big game animal."
  •   Idaho ends the unregulated hunting of mountain lions. During its 13 year run, an annual average of 142 mountain lions was reported killed in the state for recreational purposes. An estimated 303 mountain lions were harvested during the final 1971-72 hunting season.
1972
  •   Claiming that research conducted by Dr. Maurice Hornocker had added significantly to their knowledge, mountain lions in Idaho are reclassified as a "Big Game Species" and a "regulated" hunting season is established.

1973
  • Congress passes the Federal Endangered Species Act, designed to protect critically imperiled species from extinction as a "consequence of economic growth and development untendered by adequate concern and conservation."
  • Eastern cougars (felis concolor couguar) are listed as a federally endangered subspecies under the Endangered Species Act on June 4, 1973.
  •   Wyoming reclassifies mountain lions as a "trophy game animal."
1978
  •   South Dakota lists mountain lions as a "state threatened species."
1986
  •   California's lion hunting moratorium, started on March 1, 1972, is discontinued when it is unable to achieve its annual reauthorization in the state legislature. At this time, the regulated hunting of mountain lions in California was once again authorized. Despite this authorization, political pressure from individual citizens and conservation organizations such as the Mountain Lion Foundation kept lions from being hunted for sport in California until the passage of Proposition 117, and the permanent banning of sport hunting of mountain lions occurred in 1990.
  • Since the recommendation of a 1970 presidential commission that "the predator policies should be eliminated or reduced on public lands," the role of the Animal Damage Control had been greatly reduced. Finally, western members of Congress, under the prodding of disgruntled stockmen, succeeded in getting ADC transferred from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the program rebounded.
1989
  •   A disgruntled Arizona state wildlife employee takes a grisly photograph of 11 severed mountain lion heads stacked under a tree. The heads represented only one-fourth of the 44 lions killed in Arizona in 1989 by professional hunters working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's notorious Animal Damage Control (ADC) program. Several major national magazines and newspapers carried the photograph when it was released to the public the following year.
1990
  •   A coalition of conservation organizations, led by the Mountain Lion Foundation, placed Proposition 117--the Mountain Lion Initiative on the statewide ballot. This proposition, the first to have been placed solely with signatures collected by volunteers in California, passed on June 5, 1990 with 52.42 percent of the vote. Officially known as the California Wildlife Protection Act, Proposition 117 reclassified mountain lions in California as a "specially protected mammal," permanently banned the sport hunting of lions in the state, and allocated $30 million to be spent annually for 30 years on the acquisition of critical habitat for mountain lions, deer, oak woodlands, endangered species, riparian habitat, and other wildlife.
  •   Though reclassified as a "big game animals" in 1970, Arizona's mountain lion bounty law remained on the books as a non-funded program until its repeal in 1990. During the 51 years Arizona's mountain lion bounty was in effect, 7,723 mountain lions were killed and turned in to the government for the bounty, and more than a third-of-a-million dollars ($386,150) was paid in an attempt to eliminate mountain lions from the state.
1994
  •   Oregon voters approved Measure 18, which partially banned the use of hounds to hunt cougars. For three years, sport hunting related cougar mortalities declined dramatically statewide. To offset these hunting declines, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife lengthened the hunting season to 10 months (in some areas year-round), significantly reduced the cost of a hunting tag, increased hunting quotas, increased the bag limit in one hunt zone to two animals per year, and issued unlimited hunting tags - more than 32,000 tags were sold in 2002. As a result, sport hunting related cougar mortalities increased to record highs despite the ban on using hounds.
  •   First verified sighting of a mountain lion in Missouri since their extirpation in 1927.
1996
  •   With a 63 percent majority vote, Washington voters passed the citizen-placed statewide ballot initiative, I-655, which partially banned the use of hounds while hunting cougars. It was  generally thought that I-655 would significantly reduce the number of mountain lions killed in Washington. However following its passage, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife compensated for an expected drop in mountain lion mortalities by replacing the permit-only season with a general season, lengthening the hunting season from six weeks to 7 1/2 months, increasing the bag limit to two lions per year, and reducing the price of mountain lion tags. As a result, the number of mountain lion tags sold has increased from 1,000 in 1997 to over 58,000 in 2008.
  •   Backed by special interest groups such as the Safari Club, Proposition 197 is placed by the legislature on the California November ballot in an attempt to repeal the ban on hunting mountain lions in California for sport. Proposition 197 was overwhelmingly rejected by 58.12 percent of California's voters.
  •   The Utah Legislature reduces the crime of poaching a mountain lion from a felony to a misdemeanor.
1997
  •   Seeing a steady increase in mortality numbers since classifying mountain lions as a "Big Game Species" and establishing a "regulated" hunting season in 1972, Idaho experiences a peak in the annual number of mountain lions killed for recreational purposes with 798. Despite "liberalizing" future lion hunting seasons, the annual number of mountain lions killed in Idaho has continually declined since the 1997 hunting season.
1999
  •   South Dakota repeals the special hunting prohibition (SDCL 41-8-2-1) on mountain lions, wolves, and black bears.
2003
  •   South Dakota removes mountain lions from the state's threatened species list and reclassifies them as a "big game animal."
2005
  •   North Dakota's first mountain lion hunting season opened on September 2, 2005. The season closed early, five months later, on January 15, 2006 when a 4 to 6 month old, 39-lb. female was reported killed in McKenzie County. The mortality total for this first hunt was 5 mountain lions.
  •   The Mountain Lion Foundation files an unsuccessful lawsuit against the South Dakota Game, Fish & Parks Department in an attempt to block the start of South Dakota's first mountain lion hunting season.
  •   South Dakota's first mountain lion hunting season opened on Saturday, October 1, 2005. The season closed early, fifteen days later, when the quota was reached for female deaths. In all, 13 lions were harvested - six males and seven females. At the time, the "official" mountain lion population estimate for South Dakota was 165 animals.
2008
  •   The first verified sighting of mountain lions in Wisconsin since their extirpation in 1908.
  •   Chicago Police kill the first wild cougar seen in Illinois since 1855.
2009
  •   On December 14, 2009, while hunting deer, Raymond Goebels Jr., from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, came across and killed the first verified mountain lion to be found in Iowa since the species was extirpated in 1867. Declaring "It was going to die anyway," Mr. Goebels' was unapologetic for his actions. Since lions are not officially recognized as even existing in Iowa there was no law at the time preventing the killing.
2010
  •   In May, 2010 Indiana Department of Natural Resources' motion-activated cameras officially record the first verified mountain lion in the state since they were extirpated sometime between 1850 and 1865.
  •   After confirmation of the first mountain lion to be seen in Kansas since their extirpation in 1904, Representative Mitch Holmes, a Republican from west-central Kansas cattle country, introduces a bill to allow people to hunt mountain lions in Kansas without a license. The legislation fails to pass.
2011
   
    .        USFW  DECLARES THE EASTERN COUGAR EXTINCT DESPITE THE MAJORITY OF COUGAR BIOLOGISTS RECOGNIZING THAT ALL MOUNTAIN LIONS IN NORTH AMERICA ARE OF THE SAME GENOTYPE(E.G. COUGARS IN ARIZONA AND COLORADO AND CALIFORNIA ARE THE SAME AS THOSE IN FLORIDA AND BRITISH COLUMBIA AND ONTARIO)



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