By Jason Kandel
01.15.2016
Two mountain lion kittens recently were
discovered in the western end of the Santa Monica Mountains, National
Park Service officials said. Angie Crouch reports for the NBC4 News at 5
p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 14, 2016. (Published Thursday, Jan. 14, 2016)
Two
mountain lion kittens recently were discovered in the western end of the
Santa Monica Mountains, National Park Service officials said. The female and
male kittens, now known as P-46 and P-47, were implanted with tracking
devices after researchers located their den in a remote area.
"We
continue to see successful reproduction, which indicates that the
quality of the natural habitat is high for such a relatively urbanized
area," said Jeff Sikich, a biologist for Santa Monica Mountains National
Recreation Area. "But these kittens have many challenges ahead of them,
from evading other mountain lions, to crossing freeways, to dealing
with exposure to rat poison."
Sikich said he
suspected that P-19, the mother, may have given birth based upon the way
her GPS locations were localized during a three-week period, indicating
that she was likely living with her kittens.
The den was well-hidden among large
boulders and thick brush. Researchers have been tracking the mother
since 2010, when she was only a few weeks old. Her previous two litters
were the result of inbreeding with her father, P-12, but the last known
evidence of P-12 dates back to March of 2015.
DNA testing is
underway to identify whether the father is P-12 or perhaps P-45, a newly
discovered adult male. In-breeding is a significant threat to the
long-term survival of mountain lions in the Santa Monica Mountains
because the population essentially is trapped on an island of habitat,
Sikich said.
A proposed wildlife crossing over the
Ventura (101) Freeway in Agoura Hills would connect large swaths of
natural land from the Santa Monica Mountains to the Sierra Madres. This
is the ninth litter of kittens marked by National Park Service
biologists at a den site.
Two additional
litters of kittens were discovered when the kittens were already at
least six months old. Since 2002, the National Park Service has been
studying mountains lions in and around the Santa Monica Mountains to
determine how they survive in an increasingly fragmented and urbanized
environment.
Funding
for mountain lion research in the Santa Monica Mountains is provided in
part through private donations to the Santa Monica Mountains Fund.
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