The Champlin-Milford cougar, what has it taught us?
With the death of the male cougar in Milford Connecticut and the tracing of its origins back to Wisconsin and ultimately the Black Hills of South Dakota, there have been a lot of people writing their views, their opinions over this epic journey. These articles have ranged in tone from poetic praise, looking for love, to blatant fear mongering, hide your children, the cougars are coming, the cougars are coming! Unfortunately, the commonality of them all is that they are written by people who know nothing about cougars! As a result, they may provide interesting and provocative press but leave the public little information to decide if the cougar in question was just a lovelorn traveling looking for a partner or the harbinger of a public threat to ourselves.
Let's strip aside the romantic fanfare and the fear mongering rhetoric and look at this from an objective, yes, scientific, viewpoint. What does this epic journey tell us…about cougars, about the East, about us?
First, as many articles did point out, the driving force behind the journey of this male was in search of a mate, he was looking for sex. Whether cougars experience "love" as we profess to is really not of concern. We know all species need to reproduce to survive and so the sex drive in the individuals is probably the strongest one we experience. For male cougars, this means they need to travel until they find females who are available. That is, not protected by other males. The fact that this male traveled from western South Dakota to Connecticut indicates that he did not find any females in the states he crossed. So, it is very likely that there are not female cougars, necessary for a population, in Minnesota or Wisconsin or any of the other states he crossed. This tells us that, unfortunately, cougars are extinct in these states.
With that knowledge we can then concentrate on efforts to reintroduce them rather than wasting our time hoping they will magically reappear.
What else does his journey tell us? Well, although we are not sure of his exact route after he left Wisconsin, he either had to go through Canada or down through Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. All of these are very heavily populated states and he would have had to circumvent around many populated areas. Regardless of the route, he did this UNDETECTED! This incredible feat attests to this species' ability to cryptically live close to humans, which they commonly do in the Western U.S. This tells us that IF they do return to the East, most times we will not even know they are there!
Although he eventually died from an accident on a road, this animal had to have crossed hundreds, if not thousands of roads, including high speed interstates to reach his final destination. This debunks the arguments that there are too many roads in the East to support cougars. Yes, some will die on highways, as this cat did, but most will successfully maneuver these dangers, as this cat did, and as many cats in the west do daily. What else does his journey tell us? Well, although we are not sure of his exact route after he left Wisconsin, he either had to go through Canada or down through Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. All of these are very heavily populated states and he would have had to circumvent around many populated areas. Regardless of the route, he did this UNDETECTED! This incredible feat attests to this species' ability to cryptically live close to humans, which they commonly do in the Western U.S. This tells us that IF they do return to the East, most times we will not even know they are there!
By all measures, this cougar was in good physical shape when killed. He had fed well along his journey. However, nowhere along whatever route he had to take, were there reports of missing pets or attacks on livestock. This means he had to have lived off of natural prey, deer mainly. This debunks any alarmist claim that cougars in the east will present a threat to our pets and our livestock, it will just not happen.
The last point is that along this 1,500 mile journey past towns, through towns, he passed thousands of people, undetected! And not once did this cougar, again, a young and inexperienced individual, EVER show aggression, attack, or otherwise even interact with people! This unequivocally repudiates any and all arguments of the fear mongers. Cougars are NOT "Beasts in the Garden". Of all large wildlife species, they are one of the best and safest neighbors people could have. Some Easterners who moved west may still look over their backs when hiking but people born and living in "Cougar country" know there is no need to do so.
So, this epic journey of the Champlin-Milford cougar tells us a lot. There is NO reasonable argument against returning cougars to the East. They have the ability to move and live in the eastern landscape with minimal contact and conflict with humans. Unfortunately, the many articles by people who know nothing about cougars, tells us a lot about human nature and how we would rather deal with unfounded beliefs and fears rather than the facts.
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