OreCat’s Response to Hunters’ Claims that they are the Only Ones Paying for Wildlife

Last month OreCat Director Jayne Miller attended a public meeting to discuss cougar hunting and safety issues in Oregon.  In her follow up journal entry, Jayne commented that hunters felt they owned the wildlife and “bashed folks living in Portland and Eugene as not having a right to vote on issues they believe to be their own.“  Jayne went on to say, “I liked the idea of getting more Oregonians involved with the cost of caring for their wilderness.  I have a good plan about that I hope to share with folks soon!  The hunters claimed they owned the wilderness, and, if I do recall, they owned our ranch every hunting season and we got alot of fences and gates torn down.  I never got to tell them that Oregon belongs to all of us and without any cougars, your children and children’s children will have a much less quality life.

Jayne is now ready to reveal and promote the legislative plan she hinted at in her journal entry.  The project hopes to even the playing field and put an end to the idea that hunters are the only ones financially contributing to wildlife programs.

The draft of Oregon Bill LC 1202 reads:

For more information visit OreCat.org

MLF Review – Weekly Electronic Newsletter (9/9)

The following edition was emailed to Mountain Lion Foundation newsletter subscribers on Thursday, September 9th.  To receive the MLF Review in your inbox, click on the image to sign up here:

Due to formatting difficulties with reposting active links, all URL weblinks were removed from this edition.  They are, however, provided at the end of the newsletter if you’d like more information on any of the stories.

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MLF Review is a service of the Mountain Lion Foundation. All material is copyright of the Mountain Lion Foundation and may be used with attribution for non-commercial purposes.


Community Meetings in Berkeley & Oakland

The Felidae Conservation Fund aims to advance the conservation of wild cats and their habitats planetwide through a combination of groundbreaking research, compelling education and cutting-edge technology.

Felidae collaborates on strategic research studies that clearly define a process to understand human impact on wild cats and wild places. There are important steps we can take now to minimize the devastation. The goal is to prevent further extinction of felidae species, and to preserve complete ecosystems around the world. Our contributions build new outlooks toward wild cats and the preservation of global ‘wildness’.

Felidae Conservation Fund is committed to spawning compelling educational messages through stories, visual media and outreach campaigns that pilot a healthy coexistence of humans and felidae species around the world.

Upcoming Events on September 15th and October 6th:

New Mexico Cougar Rule Op-ed

The op-ed below ran in the Albuquerque Journal on September 5, 2010.
It is in regard to the New Mexico Dept of Game & Fish’s proposed cougar hunt quotas for 2011-2015.

Proposed Rules Will Wipe Out N.M.’s Cougars

By Wendy Keefover-Ring
WildEarth Guardians

The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish wants to wage war on the state’s cougars, but that will not make people or livestock safer, nor create more deer, elk or bighorn sheep for hunters. The government’s proposal focuses heavily on female cougars, and that will mean it will more quickly wipe out these majestic cats.

As part of a perfect storm for cougars, Game and Fish also seeks to limit the public’s right to object by restricting access to the rule-making process.

Right now, the public can weigh in on cougar-kill quotas every two years. But Game and Fish wants to move to a fouryear, decision-making cycle that would effectively cut the public and even the Game Commission — the rule-making body that oversees the agency — out of the process.

In comparison, most, if not all, Western states review cougar quotas annually. New Mexico’s cougars could very well be wiped out before our right to object comes around again.

Game and Fish’s 2010 proposals represent a radical departure from years of prudent stewardship encouraged by the Gov. Bill Richardson administration.

Game and Fish disposed of a comprehensive 10-year, peer-reviewed study on cougars, conducted in New Mexico and authored by Kenneth Logan and Linda Sweanor and hailed by U.S. conservation biologists as a seminal work. This $1 million study, paid for by New Mexicans, disappointed the agency because its data suggested that the cougar population was far lower than what was expedient for the agency.

Undaunted, in 2010 Game and Fish threw out the Logan and Sweanor study and now relies on a student’s unfinished, unpublished and unavailable four-year study that the agency claims determines that the population is significantly larger than Logan and Sweanor had estimated. On top of that, Game and Fish assessed a high level of kill — by using a Wyoming study that it has grossly misinterpreted.

Combined, these unscientific approaches provided Game and Fish with the “basis” for its extreme quota of 1,180 cougars per year, a 140 percent increase from the 490 figure used in 2008.

Killing females particularly harms the population because they provide the resiliency needed to overcome overhunting. Further, with the death of mother cats, dependent kittens will likely suffer starvation and death after orphaning.

To protect breeding females, in 2008 the New Mexico Game Commission unanimously approved measures to protect mothers and their kittens while continuing to allow limited sport hunting. The commission narrowed the total number of females that could be killed in each hunting zone, and it ordered an online education program that teaches hunters to differentiate between the male and female cats.

But now Game and Fish wants to kill over 457 females annually, an astonishing 263 percent increase over the 2008 level of 126.

Intuitively, it might seem like killing cougars would protect human safety, but there is no evidence that shows that sport hunting cougars makes people safer, according to “Cougar Management Guidelines” — a publication authored by 13 cougar biologists and reviewed by 30 others. In fact, abundant research indicates the exact opposite is true. By overhunting a cougar population, the age structure changes to one that is younger and more socially unstable. In other words, killing cougars might actually increase the number of harmful encounters between cougars, humans and even livestock.

A far more prudent way to protect people and livestock is through education. Recreationists and those who live in cougar country can take common sense precautions while outside, such as traveling in groups, walking with young children in hand and keeping dogs on leashes. Furthermore, livestock growers can use non-lethal means to protect livestock from cougar attacks.

Instead of waging war on cougars, we call upon the Game Commission to reject Game and Fish’s radical quota proposal and keep it at the 2008 level of 490; continue the biennial review process; make the online hunter education program mandatory to protect breeding females and kittens. We call upon Game and Fish to ramp up its nascent but promising Cougar Smart New Mexico program that promotes human-cougar coexistence.

The vast majority of New Mexicans appreciate the beauty, majesty and charisma of cougars. New Mexican voters know that cougars are an important component of our natural heritage. In fact, New Mexican wildlife watchers far exceed other forms of wildlife recreation, including hunting.

Cougars must be preserved for future generations and not squandered for short-sighted, ill purpose.

Also signed by Phil Carter of Animal Protection of New Mexico and Mary Katherine Ray of Sierra Club, Rio Grande Chapter

MLF Returns to the Folsom Zoo

Folsom Zoo Recap

This past Saturday, MLF hosted its monthly educational booth outside the cougar enclosure at the Folsom Zoo (Sacramento-area, California).  Volunteers handed out free mountain lion postcards to visitors, as well as information on living with lions and fun activity sheets for kids to take home.  These Saturday events are a great way to connect with the community and teach residents in the foothills all about their wild neighbors.  Seeing mountain lions up close in the zoo setting also calms any fear people may have and often brings a new understanding and appreciation for the American lion.

On the Prowl

The two male cougars, Rio and Ventura, were both very active in the morning chasing each other around and chirping a high-pitched “yip” as they played.  When one of the zookeepers arrived with breakfast, they eagerly trotted to the indoor enclosure to enjoy their morning chow (shown in the video clip).  If you listen carefully and ignore the rooster in the background, at the 10 second marker when they are passing each other you can hear a short “yip” chirp from one of the boys.

Flash, the young female (whose controversial rescue story you may remember from last year) spent the day snoozing in her small cave near the front fence.  Perhaps she was annoyed by the rowdy boys, but some visitors wandered if she was mourning the loss of Alder — the zoo’s older female cougar who passed away a few weeks ago and may have served as somewhat of a surrogate mother-figure for Flash.

Remembering Alder

Visitors honored Alder’s memory by sharing their stories of her and coloring paper hearts that will be used to create a memorial display.

Alder will be missed, but everyone took comfort in knowing she was given a good life at the zoo.  Despite health issues and suffering from seizures, Alder was at least twelve years old (an ol’ granny in cougar years!) and maintained her feisty playful attitude until the end.  And looking towards the future, Alder’s passing may now open up a forever home for another orphaned kitten in need.

Join Us

MLF will return to the Folsom Zoo this month for another Saturday outreach event.  New volunteers are welcome to join (you’ll get into the park free) and it’s a great way to learn more about mountain lions.  To get involved, sign up for MLF’s volunteer announcements or send an email to outreach@mountainlion.org.

We hope to see you there!

A special thank you to Estelle, Pat, and Lyn (pictured here from left to right) for helping run the booth.  Great work, ladies!

To learn more about the Mountain Lion Foundation, visit www.MountainLion.org