Mountain lion claim is investigated
The N.H. Fish and Game Department is investigating a claim that a mountain lion was spotted in the Monadnock Region sometime last week.
In the past, N.H. Fish and Game has received pictures of mountain lions supposedly spotted in New Hampshire, but that were taken out of state, Tate said."We're working with the person who submitted the photo to get an original, high-resolution photo and to show us where it was taken," Tate said. "We need to match the vegetation in the picture to the reported location to prove that the picture is verifiable."
Every year, about 100 people in the state report seeing mountain lions, but no verifiable evidence has ever been found to confirm a sighting, Tate said.
If the photograph does prove to be real, it would be the first confirmed sighting of a mountain lion in the state since Fish and Game began investigating claims of sightings in 1940.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared Northeastern mountain lions extinct, saying there hasn't been a credible sighting in several decades.
In June, a mountain lion was killed by a car in Connecticut; however, through genetic testing, officials found the animal was a Western mountain lion that had traveled to New England from South Dakota, Tate said.
"The closest we've had to documenting a sighting in New Hampshire was in 2009 when another Fish and Game employee witnessed what they believed to be a mountain lion in the Barnstead area," Tate said. However, no physical evidence of a mountain lion was found.
A Swanzey man reported seeing a mountain lion near Keene State College in late August, prompting the college's campus safety office to issue issued a campus-wide warning advising people not to approach such an animal and to report any sightings. After an investigation, N.H. Fish and Game found no evidence of a mountain lion in the area
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In the past, N.H. Fish and Game has received pictures of mountain lions supposedly spotted in New Hampshire, but that were taken out of state, Tate said.
Every year, about 100 people in the state report seeing mountain lions, but no verifiable evidence has ever been found to confirm a sighting, Tate said.
If the photograph does prove to be real, it would be the first confirmed sighting of a mountain lion in the state since Fish and Game began investigating claims of sightings in 1940.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared Northeastern mountain lions extinct, saying there hasn't been a credible sighting in several decades.
In June, a mountain lion was killed by a car in Connecticut; however, through genetic testing, officials found the animal was a Western mountain lion that had traveled to New England from South Dakota, Tate said.
"The closest we've had to documenting a sighting in New Hampshire was in 2009 when another Fish and Game employee witnessed what they believed to be a mountain lion in the Barnstead area," Tate said. However, no physical evidence of a mountain lion was found.
A Swanzey man reported seeing a mountain lion near Keene State College in late August, prompting the college's campus safety office to issue issued a campus-wide warning advising people not to approach such an animal and to report any sightings. After an investigation, N.H. Fish and Game found no evidence of a mountain lion in the area
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Mountain Lion Reported In East Haddam, Ct.
EAST HADDAM — The town's animal control officer spotted a mountain lion near Route 149 and Creek Row this week. Michael Olzacki was responding to a citizen's call when he saw the animal, he said. He identified it by its markings, and he found footprints that could have been from a lion, he said. The Department of Energy and Environmental Protection sent a conservation officer to the scene. The prints were inconclusive because they were in mud, and there was no other physical evidence such as scat, but the agency will continue to investigate.
The DEEP maintains that the state does not have a breeding population of mountain lions.
A mountain lion was killed on the Wilbur Cross Parkway in Milford earlier this year. It was later learned that it had traveled here from South Dakota.
A mountain lion was killed on the Wilbur Cross Parkway in Milford earlier this year. It was later learned that it had traveled here from South Dakota.
Nice article but it's incredible ! i hope that it's true !
ReplyDeleteOne could travel fro Dakota ,then why not twenty more?
ReplyDeletewith the South Dakota Puma population under heavy hunting pressure, the likelihood of scores of "Cats" making the trek that far east is quite remote
ReplyDelete