either escaped or had been released.
They
also insisted that they don't have a "shoot-on-sight" policy for
mountain lions, which have been reclaiming lost territory in recent
years and expanding their range from their stronghold in the western
United States. "It will be a case-by-case situation," said Mark
Marraccini, spokesman for the Kentucky Department of Wildlife Resources.
"The circumstances will speak for themselves."
Wildlife
biologists and veterinarian Iga Stasiak on Tuesday conducted a necropsy
on the mountain lion, which was shot Monday in Bourbon County after
state wildlife officers deemed it a risk. Genetic material from the big
cat will be sent out of state to a wildlife lab to see whether the
animals DNA matches any wild populations. "They can determine the origin," said Marraccini, adding the investigation will take weeks to get answers.
Wednesday,
however, Marraccini was downplaying the possibility that the animal was
wild. He said it appeared to be too healthy "to have walked here from
Nebraska." But he also noted that Kentucky has a big deer population and a lot of potential suitable habitat.
The
Courier-Journal on Tuesday reported that mountain lions have colonized
in South Dakota, Nebraska and Missouri, having moved in from the West.
There have also been sightings in Indiana.
Kentucky's
investigation will include looking into where the animal might have
lived in captivity, Marraccini said, declining to elaborate. If it turns
out to be a wild cat, he said it would prompt a discussion within the
agency about the potential management of such a top-line predator in the
state.
While biologists would be excited about the potential, he
said Kentucky residents would likely be very wary, noting that state
residents were opposed to reintroduction of the red wolf, another
predator, to the state in the 1980s.
Some Kentucky residents have
had a hard time adjusting to the return of black bears, Marraccini said.
It means they have to change old patterns, such as not leaving dog food
on the porch. For now, he said, there is no policy on how field
officers are to handle any mountain lion sightings, other than to give
them the authority to do what is necessary for public safety. In this
case, he said the animal was in a populated rural area within two miles
of Paris, and the officer feared the cat could slip away into the night
if it were not killed.
Wildlife advocates, however, have argued
that mountain lions can be an important part of any ecosystem and that
attacks on humans are very rare. In some states, they are also hunted.
The
shooting was reminiscent of a similar action taken by Illinois wildlife
officials in November 2013. That state had wiped out its mountain lion
population by 1970, but when one showed up on a farm last year, game
wardens quickly dispatched the animal as a threat. "When the
(officer) arrived at the farm, he made contact with the farm owner's
wife, who was in the house, and checked a horse barn and lot where the
landowner's horses were located," Illinois Department of Natural
Resources reported at the time. "The cougar was discovered in a concrete
tunnel beneath a corn crib."
Mountain lions are the largest cats
found in North America and can measure up to eight feet from nose to
tail and weigh up to 180 pounds. Also known as cougars, pumas, panthers
and catamounts, the cats are considered top-line predators other species
rarely feed on them.
source
Kentucky
wildlife officials on Wednesday said it could be weeks before they know
whether the first confirmed mountain lion in the state since the Civil
War is wild or had been living in captivity and
No comments:
Post a Comment