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Eastern Cougar Extinct: Mountain Lion Declared Gone From East U.S.

Eastern Cougar Extinct

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 03/02/11 09:52 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The "ghost cat" is just that.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday declared the eastern cougar to be extinct, confirming a widely held belief among wildlife biologists that native populations of the big cat were wiped out by man a century ago.

After a lengthy review, federal officials concluded there are no breeding populations of cougars – also known as pumas, panthers, mountain lions and catamounts – in the eastern United States. Researchers believe the eastern cougar subspecies has probably been extinct since the 1930s.

Wednesday's declaration paves the way for the eastern cougar to be removed from the endangered species list, where it was placed in 1973. The agency's decision to declare the eastern cougar extinct does not affect the status of the Florida panther, another endangered wildcat.

Some hunters and outdoors enthusiasts have long insisted there's a small breeding population of eastern cougars, saying the secretive cats have simply eluded detection – hence the "ghost cat" moniker. The wildlife service said Wednesday it confirmed 108 sightings between 1900 and 2010, but that these animals either escaped or were released from captivity, or migrated from western states to the Midwest.

"The Fish and Wildlife Service fully believes that some people have seen cougars, and that was an important part of the review that we did," said Mark McCollough, an endangered species biologist who led the agency's eastern cougar study. "We went on to evaluate where these animals would be coming from."

A breeding population of eastern cougars would almost certainly have left evidence of its existence, he said. Cats would have been hit by cars or caught in traps, left tracks in the snow or turned up on any of the hundreds of thousands of trail cameras that dot Eastern forests.

But researchers have come up empty.

The private Eastern Cougar Foundation, for example, spent a decade looking for evidence. Finding none, it changed its name to the Cougar Rewilding Foundation last year and shifted its focus from confirming sightings to advocating for the restoration of the big cat to its pre-colonial habitat.

"We would have loved nothing more than for there to be a remnant wild population of cougars on the East Coast," said Christopher Spatz, the foundation's president. "We're not seeing (evidence) because they're not here."

Others maintain that wild cougars still prowl east of the Mississippi.

Ray Sedorchuk, 45, an avid hunter and outdoorsman, said he got an excellent look at a cougar last June in rural Bradford County, in northern Pennsylvania. He was in his truck when a reddish-brown animal with a long tail crossed the road. He said he jammed on the brakes, and the cougar stopped in its tracks.

"I could see the body, the tail and the head, the entire animal, perfectly. It's not a bobcat, it's not a housecat, it's a cougar," he said. "It's a sleek animal. It ran low to the ground and stealth-like. It moved with elegance."

Sedorchuk, a freelance writer who spends copious amounts of time in the woods, said he'd always been skeptical of the eastern cougar's existence, even as two of his friends insisted to him that they had seen them in the wild.

And now?

"I believe that they're here, without even thinking twice about it," he said. "I believe there aren't that many, but there are enough where they can get together and breed."

Once widely dispersed throughout the eastern United States, the mountain lion was all but wiped out by the turn of the last century. Cougars were killed in vast numbers, and states even held bounties. A nearly catastrophic decline in white-tailed deer – the main prey of mountain lions – also contributed to the species' extirpation.

McCollough said the last wild cougar was believed to have been killed in Maine in 1938.

The wildlife service treated the eastern cougar as a distinct subspecies, even though some biologists now believe it is genetically the same as its western brethren, which is increasing in number and extending its range. Some experts believe that mountain lions will eventually make their way back East.

The loss of a top-level predator like the cougar has had ecological consequences, including an explosion in the deer population and a corresponding decline in the health of Eastern forests.

"Our ecosystems are collapsing up and down the East Coast, and they're collapsing because we have too many white-tailed deer," said Spatz. "Our forests are not being permitted to regenerate."

Cougars and wolves, he said, would thin the deer herd through direct predation while also acting as "natural shepherds," forcing deer to become more vigilant and "stop browsing like cattle."

Spatz's group would like the federal government to reintroduce cougars and wolves to the eastern United States, though he acknowledged any such plan would come up against fierce resistance.

The wildlife service said Wednesday it has no authority under the Endangered Species Act to reintroduce the mountain lion to the East.

___

Online:

http://www.fws.gov/northeast/ecougar/

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ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The "ghost cat" is just that. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday declared the eastern cougar to be extinct, confirming a widely held belief among wildlife bio...
ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The "ghost cat" is just that. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday declared the eastern cougar to be extinct, confirming a widely held belief among wildlife bio...
 
 
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maribelles
have opinion? win fans, lose fans
05:51 PM on 04/12/2011
The information in this article is , as they say in the eastern mountains, a bunch of hooey.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
09:39 PM on 04/11/2011
http://www.fws.gov/northeast/pdf/ecougar.pdf

more info.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
09:29 PM on 04/11/2011
http://www.bear-tracker.com/cougar.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_Lion

i hope these links might help someone.
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Deep Thinking Man
Always Remember, A Wet Bird Never Flies At Night !
08:30 PM on 04/11/2011
PogoMom,
what you've asked is entirely possible and probably right !!!!!...what you could do, is contact your DNR office, State Reps and Congressman's office and ask what you can do to help the Mountain Lion !!!!!!...and DON'T LET THEM off the hook !!!!!!...demand answers to your questions !!!!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
06:41 PM on 03/09/2011
Just to clarify - They did NOT say that there are no mountain lions in the eastern US. What they have said is that there are no members of the genetic line that inhabited the region when it was colonized by Europeans.

It is always possible, in theory, for cougars to disperse east from the Rockies, if a bit unlikely. What is more likely is that the ones seen in the past decade or so are escaped pets, or pets that were released because they stopped being small, cute, and fuzzy.

The exotic pet trade has seen mountain lions sold from South and Central America, and as the picture on this article shows, cougar cubs are extremely cute. There may be cougars around the eastern US, but they are not "eastern cougars", they're transplants or migrants from other regions of the planet.
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IrieMoon
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.
08:20 AM on 03/10/2011
What the Fish and Wildlife Service/Game Commission say in this article is different than what they say in person. In person they say "You just saw a big Bobcat" or "You just saw a big housecat". I grew up in the mountains of PA and have seen a Mountain Lion first hand. It may not be the direct decendant of the Mountain Lions that inhabited the area when the first settlers came but it was certainly a Mountain Lion regardless of how much the Fish and Wildlife/Game Commission tell me it wasn't.
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alteredstory
Hold on to the center
09:00 AM on 03/10/2011
Ok, but given the millions of people up the east coast who wouldn't know the difference if the two species held a tap-dancing competition on their bed, officials have to go with probabilities in the absence of proof.
10:31 PM on 04/08/2011
I live in Bradford County PA. There have been enough sightings of cougars to keep them on the Endangered species list. I suspect that the gas drilling industry would rather not hassle with the Endangered Species Act nor would the States since then they would be responsible for Endangered Species habitat mitigation and doing real studies. There really was no credible research done to look for the cougars recently it is more of a political issue. More money has been spent looking for Wolverines and hardly sightings of Wolverines are even more rare than Eastern Cougars. Plus now they are saying they are genetically identical to the Western Cougar so I guess the eastern cougar never existed? Its pretty fishy that now they are removing the Eastern Cougar from the Endangered Species list only now that industry is moving in.
06:13 AM on 03/06/2011
I grew up in Western Mass. and although rare, everyone in my family saw cougars at one time. I never believed them or rather thought they were imagining that the prevalent, mangy wild cat was a mountain lion, until I saw one literally come up to about five hundred feet of our house, dimly lit by the porch light. A big, streamlined, elegant feline, seemed to stare at me; perfectly still as a sculpture and wasn't even remotely scared of me staring back from the open door. Then it lost interest and stole away. "There are pumas!"I blurted out, "awesome!"
ok, I was 14. I don't have any doubt there are some around anyway, and there are plenty of deer to keep them fed. As long as hunters don't interfere, I think they'll come back naturally. Whether it was an eastern cougar or not, I've no idea. But it had the distinct markings and shape of one, from what I could tell
12:21 AM on 03/06/2011
Question: I have seen a Mountain Lion and know others who have. These sightings are in an area currently being investigated for fracking for the shale...Could declaring these endangered animals gone be a way to clear a hurdle to access the gas? If so, what do we do?
09:56 PM on 03/06/2011
I had the same thought enter my head. Not that the gas industry has many environmental hurdles; it could be a precautionary measure. Regardless, a conspiracy theory is always a fun thing to think about and investigate.
05:07 PM on 03/05/2011
This isn't true!! There was one seen here in Morgantown, WV several times last year. It even killed a dog near town. Then was seen in the Cheat Lake area.
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12:57 PM on 03/05/2011
liars in 2005 one crossed my backyard into promiseland state park. so they should stop being so sure and ask the people who have seen them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ImaVeteran
08:04 AM on 03/05/2011
Yeah, where did the photo come from? It isn't a 1937 series photo.
03:59 AM on 03/05/2011
From NW Connecticut, I saw one in my back yard (which is next to a forest preserve) and a neighbor who lives 5 miles away took a photo of one in her back yard. It was too big to be a bobcat.
08:56 PM on 03/04/2011
My girlfriend and I were hiking 40 acre rock in South Carolina last summer when we came around a bend and saw one 50 ft in front of us. I have never been so surprised in my life to see one that close nor did I ever imagine seeing one in South Carolina. It was a beautiful animal but I held on to my walking stick, and the hike back to my truck was definitely faster then the hike to the cave.
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SharonWantsToTalk
08:39 PM on 03/04/2011
There was one alive and well walking down the road in front of my house in upstate NY one hot day last summer. It then turned, crossed the road and made a huge leap into my back field. I have heard consistent sightings here for 15 years.
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60256
How Strange, Innocence
08:17 PM on 03/04/2011
One thing this article didn't mention was that quite a few scientists believe that the "Eastern Cougar" was actually just rogue western cougars with no biological difference.