Eastern cougar

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Eastern cougar
File:EasternCougar.jpg

Extinct (2011) (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
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P. concolor couguar
Trinomial name
Puma concolor couguar
Synonyms

Felis concolor couguar

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Eastern cougar or eastern puma (Puma concolor couguar) is the name given to the extirpated cougars that once lived in northeastern North America. They were part of the subspecies of the North American cougar.[2][3] The eastern cougars were deemed "extinct" (sic) by a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) evaluation in 2011, while a parallel Canadian organization has taken no position on the question.

History of taxonomy

In 1792, Robert Kerr of the Royal Physical Society and Royal Society of Surgeons assigned the name Felis couguar to eastern North America cougars north of Florida.[4] John Audubon in 1851 believed that cougars in both North and South America were indistinguishable. The eastern cougar was first assigned to the subspecies Felis concolor couguar and the Florida panther (F. c. coryi).[5] Young and Goldman based their description of the eastern subspecies on their examination of eight of the existing 26 historic specimens.[6]

In 1955, Jackson described a new subspecies, the Wisconsin puma (F. c. schorgeri), from a small sample of skulls.[7]

A 1981 taxonomy (Hall) accepted F. c. schorgeri, the Wisconsin puma, and also extended the range of the eastern puma into Nova Scotia and mapped the Florida panther’s (F. c. coryi) range as far north as South Carolina and southwestern Tennessee.[8]

In 2000, Culver et al., recommended that based on recent genetic research, all North American cougars be classified as a single subspecies, Puma concolor couguar following the oldest named subspecies (Kerr[5] in 1792).[3]

The 2005 edition of Mammal Species of the World[9] followed Culver’s recommendations. This revision was made by Dr. W. Chris Wozencraft of Bethel University, Indiana, as the sole reviewer. However, the publication's Web site as of 2011, as well as that of its affiliate, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, continued to maintain the Puma concolor couguar (both western and eastern cougars) as a subspecies of Puma concolor.[9][10]

Dr. Judith Eger, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, chair of the American Society of Mammalogists checklist committee, believes that the Culver work was not a proper taxonomic revision, as it offered no evaluation of the existing subspecies of the puma and failed to include morphological, ecological, and behavioral considerations. According to Eger, the Culver revision is only accepted by some puma biologists.[11]

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service continues to accept the Young and Goldman taxonomy. "While more recent genetic information introduces significant ambiguities, a full taxonomic analysis is necessary to conclude that a revision to the Young and Goldman (1946) taxonomy is warranted," the agency said in 2011.

Uncertainty of survival

A consensus exists among wildlife officials in 21 eastern states that the eastern cougar subspecies has been extirpated from eastern United States. The federal government of Canada has taken no position on the subspecies' existence, continued or otherwise, and terms the evidence "inconclusive."[12]

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reviewed all available research and other information, and concluded in 2011 that the eastern cougar subspecies has been extinct since the 1930s, and recommended that it be removed from its list of endangered species.[11] The agency used the 1946 taxonomy of S.P. Young and E.A. Goldman in defining the eastern cougar subspecies. While noting that some taxonomists in recent years have classified all North American cougars within a single subspecies, the agency's 2011 report said "a full taxonomic analysis is necessary to conclude that a revision to the Young and Goldman (1946) taxonomy is warranted."[5]

The agency acknowledged the occasional presence of cougars in eastern North America, but believes these are of wanderers from western breeding ranges or escaped captives. Its review expressed skepticism that breeding populations exist north of Florida, noting, among other things, the lack of consistent road kill evidence comparable to known cougar ranges. However, the presence of cougars in the wild — whatever their taxonomy or origin — in eastern North America, continues to be controversial.[13]

Various residents of eastern North America, especially in rural regions, have reported as many as 10,000 cougar sightings since the 1960s[2] and many continue to believe the subspecies has survived.[13]

Bruce Wright — a wildlife biologist and former student of Aldo Leopold — popularized the idea that a breeding population of cougars persisted in northern New England and the Maritime provinces through a series of articles and books published between 1960 and 1973. Wright based his idea mostly on unconfirmed sightings, track photos and plaster casts, and photographs of pumas killed in New Brunswick in 1932 and in Maine in 1938.[14]

Since the 1970s, privately run groups have formed in nearly every state to compile and investigate records of cougar sightings. Many of these groups are convinced that breeding populations of cougars exist throughout the region. Some believe that a conspiracy to hide information or secretly reintroduce cougars is actively underway by state and federal governments. Some endeavor to promote the recovery of cougars in eastern North America.[2] Large numbers of cougar sightings have been reliably reported throughout the Midwest.[15]

Possible colonization of east by western cougars

At least several dozen or more reported sightings have been confirmed by biologists, many of whom believe they are accounted for by escaped captives or individual members of the western subspecies who have wandered hundreds of miles from their established breeding ranges in the Dakotas or elsewhere in the west.[16]

Eastern U.S. reported sightings, many of which reviewed in the recent federal report,[17] in various locations, including Michigan[18][19][20][21] (See Upper Peninsula), Wisconsin,[22][23] Southern Indiana, Illinois,[24] Missouri,[24][25] Kentucky,[24] Connecticut,[16][26] New York[27] Maine,[28] Massachusetts,[24] New Hampshire,[29] North Carolina,[24] Virginia,[24] Arkansas,[30] Vermont,[24] Alabama[30] Louisiana,[30][31] and Tennessee.[32]

Until around 1990, reports of mountain lions in the Midwest and East were highly influenced by the "Bigfoot factor," according to Mark Dowling, co-founder of the Eastern Cougar Network. "None of it was really real," he said in an interview.[33] But the situation has changed dramatically since that time according to Dowling, whose group collects and disseminates data on the shifting mountain lion population.[33]

Dowling said in 2003 that sightings in the eastern half of the nation, including Michigan, etc., were "almost certainly" escaped captives, but he added that the notion that (Western) cougars "will eventually reach New Jersey" is a reasonable prediction, in part due to increased populations of whitetail deer.[33]

However, some of these cougars found far in the east were established to be of western origin. As noted in an opinion piece by David Baron in the New York Times, concerning a cougar killed by a car in Connecticut in 2011:

"Wildlife officials, who at first assumed the cat was a captive animal that had escaped its owners, examined its DNA and concluded that it was a wild cougar from the Black Hills of South Dakota. It had wandered at least 1,500 miles before meeting its end at the front of an S.U.V. in Connecticut. That is one impressive walkabout.

"You have to appreciate this cat’s sense of irony, too. The cougar showed up in the East just three months after the Fish and Wildlife Service declared the eastern cougar extinct, a move that would exempt the officially nonexistent subspecies of the big cat from federal protection. Perhaps this red-state cougar traveled east to send a message to Washington: the federal government can make pronouncements about where cougars are not supposed to be found, but a cat’s going to go where a cat wants to go."[16]

Canadian views

A 1998 study for Canada's national Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada concluded "that there is no objective evidence (actual cougar specimens or other unequivocal confirmation) for the continuous presence of cougars since the last century anywhere in eastern Canada or the eastern United States outside of Florida."[34] Based on this, in 1999, the magazine Canadian Geographic reported that for the previous half century, a debate over whether or not Canada's eastern woods host a cougar species all its own has raged. "Now the answer appears to be 'no.' Experts say past sightings were cases of mistaken identification."[35]

However, the Canadian committee's web site as of 2011 says that data is "insufficient" to draw conclusions regarding the subspecies’ continued existence, or even whether it ever existed at all.[12][13][36]

In March 2011, an official with the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources stated that cougars are present in the province.[37] This official said individual cougars in Ontario may be escaped zoo animals or pets or may have migrated from the western parts of North America.[38]

As in the eastern U.S., there have been numerous cougar sightings reported by Canadians in Ontario,[24][38] Quebec,[38] New Brunswick[24] and Nova Scotia.[38][39][40][41][42]

The privately run Ontario Puma Foundation estimates that there are 550 pumas in the province and their numbers are increasing steadily to a sustainable population.[43]

Extinction recognized

On June 17, 2015, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed the eastern puma from their endangered species list, declaring that the species is now extinct. According to the Center for Biological Diversity, "The eastern cougar was extinct well before it was protected under the Endangered Species Act, as was the case with eight of the other 10 species that have been delisted for extinction." The Florida Panther, a subspecies, still exists in small groups in southern Florida.[44]

References

  1. IUCN Red List 2012.
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  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Kerr, R. (1792) The animal kingdom, or zoological system of the celebrated Linnaeus. London, England.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Young, S.P. and Goldman, E.A. (1946) The puma: Mysterious American cat. American Wildlife Institute, Washington, D.C.
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  8. Hall, E.R. (1981). The Mammals of North America, Second edition. John Wiley and Sons, New York
  9. 9.0 9.1 Puma concolor. Mammal Species of the World. Bucknell.edu.
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  14. Bolgiano, C. (1995). Mountain lion: An unnatural history of pumas and people. Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, ISBN 0811710440.
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  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Eastern cougar declared extinct, confirming decades of suspicion, a March 2, 2011 CNN News blog post
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  21. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. 2005 Winner Michigan Book Award from the Library of Michigan
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  26. On June 10, 2011, a cougar was observed roaming near Greenwich, Connecticut. State officials at the time said they believed it was a released pet.Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. On June 11, 2011, a cougar, believed to be the same, was killed by a car on the Wilbur Cross Parkway in Milford, Connecticut. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. When wildlife officials examined the cougar's DNA, they concluded that it was a wild cougar from the Black Hills of South Dakota, which had wandered at least 1,500 miles east over an indeterminate time.
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  32. Tennessee Officials Confirm First Cougar Sighting in 100 Years, Field & Stream
  33. 33.0 33.1 33.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  34. Scott, F.W. (1998). Update of COSEWIC status report on cougar (Felis concolor couguar), eastern population. Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, Environment Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
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  37. Mountain lion (Cougar), Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry
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Further reading

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External links