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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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Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Despite the fact that Pumas in the eastern half of North America were officially ruled extinct by the USFW Service last week, the video(click on link below to view) from Digby Neck Nova Scotia, Canada last week has some biologists feeling that the "GHOST CAT" might be back............."The debate over whether cougars have ever lived in Nova Scotia goes back many years"......... "Some authors (Farley Mowatt) maintain that the cougar once inhabited all of the Atlantic provinces except Newfoundland prior to the arrival of Europeans"............"However, there are no historical records of cougar specimens in Nova Scotia".............. "To those familiar with the history of big game in Nova Scotia and the feeding behaviour of cougars, this may come as little surprise"..........."The preferred food of cougar is deer, and in Nova Scotia the white-tailed deer was extinct for many years before the arrival of Europeans"............."White-tailed deer were not reintroduced back into Nova Scotia until the turn of the 20th century"...........With the deer population now at an estimated 58,000 in the Province and with a sustainable annual hunter kill of some 9,000(16%), there is enough information on that video(combined with a large enough deer herd) to have some biologists suspecting that the cougar just might in fact exist in the Maritimes...........A search of the area where the video was recorded for DNA hair samples is underway to prove conclusively one way or the other whether Puma's are indeed back on Nova Scotia turf


CLICK ON THIS LINK TO WATCH  TWO CONSECUTIVE VIDEOS OF WHAT MOST LIKELY IS A PUMA IN NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA(recorded the week of Feb 18, 2019)

Could they be cougars(In Nova Scotia, Canada)?  Experts say it's likely


 by: 
'There is enough information on that video to make me feel
 that cougar was the logical conclusion,' said wildlife
 biologist Bob Bancroff.  Nova Scotians have been hearing
 about cougar sightings for years.Wildlife officials have
 concluded many of those reports were actually bobcats,
 house cats or fakes, but now there's solid evidence the 
large cats may actually be in the province.


The last confirmed sightings of Eastern cougars are 
believed to be in Maine in 1938 and in New Brunswick in
 1932. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service now says cougars 
in eastern parts of Canada and the U.S. have been extinct
 for 70 years. (Craig Pamplin)











Last week, Lindsay Trask uploaded a video on YouTube
 showing three cats walking down a hill behind her Digby
 Neck home that has convinced two experts that cougars
 may be present in Nova Scotia.

"There is enough information on that video to make me
 feel that cougar was the logical conclusion," said wildlife
biologist Bob Bancroft. Curator of zoology at the Nova
 Scotia Museum, Andrew Hebda, agrees. "Long tail,
 so not bobcat, not lynx," he said. 

In addition, Hebda told NEWS 95.7's The Rick Howe
 Show, footprint photos submitted by Trask rule out the
 possibility they were house cats. "The pad ... with 
domestic cats they have three smooth, rounded 
lobes to them. This one has two rounded lobes on 
the side and the top is flattened out," he explained.
 "That's classic cougar."

Digby Neck, site of what appears on video to be
 three Pumas
















However, in order for provincial wildlife experts to officially
 recognize the cougar's existence in Nova Scotia, DNA
 evidence would be needed. "When they groom they take 
in a quite a bit of hair, so based on a scat analysis you
 could do a DNA [test] and determine what you've got,"
 Hebda said.

Bancroft said cougars are generally solitary animals.
As the video shows three travelling together, he believes
 it's a mother with two juveniles.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/cougar-nova-scotia-hair-sample-1.3474365

Cougar riddle in Nova Scotia 

may soon be answered

The question of whether there are cougars in Nova
Scotia may have an answer this month. 

An illustration of an eastern cougar, a species
 last seen in 1938. 












According to Parks Canada, hair collected from
scratch posts designed to lure the elusive creatures
 and collect their hair has yielded one positive
 result for cougar DNA and another unconfirmed
result. 
Chris McCarthy, resource conservation manager
 at Kejimkujik National Park and National Historic
 Site, said Parks Canada has hired another
 independent lab to analyze the sample from
 Keji to determine if indeed there are cougars
in the province. 
"We've got conflicting results. It's really important
 — Parks Canada has to base everything in sound
 scientific method and we have to ensure accurate
 results. In this case, we have two results and
 they're conflicting," McCarthy told CBC's Maritime
 Noon
"We have to ensure that we know for sure before
 we can announce anything. At this point, we have
 nothing conclusive."

'We need to be certain'

McCarthy said it's possible that if the test comes
 back positive for cougar hair, the animal could
have been an escaped pet.
The animal would likely not be an elusive
 Eastern cougar, whose existence is
controversial for a number of reasons.
For one, biologists cannot seem to agree
whether the animal was its own distinct
subspecies or whether all North American
cougars are part of the same subspecies.
Also, the last confirmed sightings of cougars
 in this area are believed to be in Maine in
1938 and in New Brunswick in 1932.
Biologists say numerous reported sightings
 in recent years are compelling and have
 helped sustain belief of the animal's
existence here, but they have yet to find
any scientific proof of the large cats. 
"People can make mistakes. There's
degrees of certainty out there and we
need to be certain beyond all reasonable
doubt," said McCarthy. 
The so-called Eastern cougar was
designated as endangered in 1973,
 only to be redesignated "data deficient"
in 1998 due to an absence of scientific
proof. Last year, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
 Service proposed removing the Eastern 
cougar from the endangered species list,
 declaring that the cougars have likely
been extinct for at least 70 years. 

'Anything is possible'

So what is the likelihood there is a wild,
breeding population of cougars in Nova Scotia? 
"My guess is — and I'm not an expert on
cougars — my guess is it's unlikely," said McCarthy. 
"To me, there would be a lot more evidence."
 Evidence such as more conclusive DNA
proof, cougar tracks and eyewitness photos.  
However, McCarthy is not ruling out the
possibility that cougars exist in the province.
 "Anything is possible." 

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