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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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Saturday, July 9, 2011

Another naysayer article about the possibility of Cougars calling Connecticut home..............Most likely this author is correct..........what fun it would be if the stomach contents revealed that the road killed Cougar of of June 11 was not de-clawed and a North American Cougar.........dream on Rick Meril :))))))

The Unmountain Lion
Despite many 'sightings' over the years, it's doubtful Connecticut has mountain lions

Mountain lions have been declared extinct by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. The closest known groupings are in Missouri, South Dakota, and southern Florida. Why do so many people up here keep thinking they saw one?

They are seeing something. But large wild animals move too quickly to stand for a photograph. The animals move around at dawn and dusk. People have not located really good tracks or scat.
Despite the mystery, the sightings are consistent and slightly more frequent than Bigfoot. Just over a week ago, Waterford's animal control officer, Robert Yuchniuk, received a report of a mountain lion sighting from "a credible person."

A Connecticut website, http://ctmountainlion.org/, posts more claims of sightings. In recent weeks people reported they saw the large tan cats passing through Scotland, Salem, Willimantic, Cromwell, Glastonbury, and other towns. "I won't tell you they did not see one," said Rick Jacobson, director of the wildlife division of the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. "I'll tell you that the probability is small but that it's possible that they saw one."

Jacobson said that when he talks to people about what they saw, asking about coloration, size, and weight, "frequently over the course of the conversations, the callers come to their own conclusions that what they saw was probably something else." Jacobson said there is no way to know if all of the other claims of sightings are true. For all but that cougar killed in June on the Wilbur Cross, no evidence has emerged to prove what the other animals were.

The DEEP believes that the dead mountain lion was the same one spotted earlier that week in Greenwich. Officials have said it probably escaped or was released from someone in the exotic pet trade or who bought the animal. New York officials told Connecticut that all legally held mountain lions there were accounted for, according to Jacobson. Personal possession of wild cats in Connecticut is against the law, but it's legal in New York. Of course, the cougar could have come from an underground illegal trade. "Try Googling 'mountain lions for sale,'" Jacobson said. "You get a lot of hits."

A primer: Was it a mountain lion, coyote, or bobcat?
It seems cruel for exotic animal breeders to raise such a large, mobile, solitary creature as a mountain lion in Connecticut's road-ridden landscape. Even so, letting one free can't be foremost on their minds.
Let's assume, then, for the purposes of this primer, that mountain lions are living here, in the back woods and fields. If they are, it would help if people could hone skills at identifying a large mammal in poor light.

History
These animals are considered extinct, so at best, they are extremely rare. Northeastern mountain lions, also called cougars, panthers, catamounts, and a few dozen other nicknames, left with the last glaciers. Then they returned as migrants from southern climes. Most of them throughout North America are of a similar genetic pool unless imported. (Officials are testing the stomach contents of the dead Connecticut cougar to try to figure out if the food is from animals that did not come from North America.)

The most likely animal you could mistake for a mountain lion, I'd guess, is a coyote. A moving bobcat might also fool the eye at dusk.

Size and weight
Mountain lions are big: 80 to 180 pounds, 2 feet to 3 feet high at the shoulders, and 6 feet to 8 feet long from nose to tail tip. You could mistake a coyote — thousands of them live here — for a mountain lion. Coyotes are lighter and smaller, about 5 feet from tip to tail. Bobcats are the smallest, only as big as 40 pounds and up to 3 feet long, but their heads are very cat-like.

Color
The mountain lion is uniformly tan except for a black tip on its long tail and some black on its ears. Coyotes are tan but with can have black markings and shorter tails also with black tips. Coyotes carry their tails low. Bobcats are reddish brown with spots that might be faint and tails with rings and—yes—black tips. Mountain lion kittens could be mistaken for bobcats: They have camouflaging spots and rings around their tails. At dusk doesn't everything look brown?

Speed
Mountain lions can run 50 miles per hour and will travel far in one day. They are always moving, and solitary. Coyotes also run fast, up to 40 mph. Coyote families stake out territories but will travel far to establish new ones. Bobcats aren't as fast but will travel several miles in a day looking for food.

Food
Mountain lions and coyotes will eat mammals. Either might take out a weak deer and cover up the carcass to provide a meal for days. Bobcats go for the smaller animals like woodchucks and squirrels but will eat a deer if they have to.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your article indicates that only once has anyone been able to prove a mtn lion sighting in CT, which is incorrect. In addition to the animal found dead on the WCP, several days prior a mtn lion was captured on film in Greenwich and scat was positively identified to be that of a mtn lion. Not the DEP will insist that it was the same animal, but now THEY have the responsibility to prove that -- which to my knowledge has not happened to date.

Coyotes, Wolves and Cougars forever said...

You are right about the 2nd i.d............and the assumption by the FWS that it was the same Cougar that was killed by the auto.............

definition of assumption-never assume as it makes an ass out of those who do :)))).............

we await proof of one or two or multiple animals in the State of Connecticut.