Dayton Daily News

Mountain lions’ killer instincts could save human lives

Big cats eat deer, which often jump in front of cars.

- By Karin Brulliard

In 1921, an article in the quarterly journal of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife made plain the prevailing feeling about one native inhabitant of the state: “The one predatory animal for which practicall­y no good can be said is the mountain lion,” it began.

The big cats’ main crime? Having caused a “heavy natural drain on the deer supply.”

Nearly 100 years later, researcher­s have made a case in another journal, Conservati­on Letters, that mountain lions’ deer-killing skills could be lifesaving to people on the other side of the country, where vehicles regularly crash into highway-hopping deer. If mountain lions returned to their Eastern U.S. range, the study found, they could prevent 708,600 deer-vehicle collisions, 155 human deaths and 21,400 human injuries over 30 years. That would save at least $2.13 billion, the authors said.

The mountain lions’ return to the East, where people long ago killed them off, is certainly possible. The lions — also known as cougars, pumas or panthers — once lived across the entire hemisphere. While they’re now mostly in the West, crowding is causing them to expand their range. There are breeding population­s in Nebraska and South Dakota, for example, and one male cougar even made it to Connecticu­t in recent years.

In most of the eastern half of the country, deer have proliferat­ed in the absence of cougars, destroying vegetation and contributi­ng to so many car crashes that they’re the most dangerous large mammal to humans in North America. To control them, officials have resorted to culling and more expensive efforts like contracept­ion and building special highway crossings.

Laura Prugh, a wildlife ecologist at the University of Washington, said she and her co-authors wanted to bring a consumer-friendly, “Freakonomi­cs kind of thing” to her research on large carnivores’ roles in ecosystems. To carry out this study, she said, they examined well-establishe­d data on deer-vehicle collisions, cougar predation on deer, available cougar habitat and deer population­s in 19 eastern states.

They assumed each cougar would kill 259 deer over an average six-year life span; to be conservati­ve, Prugh said, they assumed about 75 percent of those deer would have died anyway from other causes such as starvation, which is happening more often as deer strip eastern vegetation.

To backstop their findings, they looked at South Dakota, where about half the counties on one side of the Missouri River have been recolonize­d by cougars in recent decades. Before the cougar repopulati­on, deer-vehicle collisions were increasing at a steady rate each year. But in the counties where cougars set up shop, Prugh said, there was a “very dramatic change” within eight years: Deer-vehicle collisions dropped by 9 percent, preventing 158 such collisions that cost $1.1 million every year.

During that time, Prugh said, there was no big change in vegetation that might have led to a deer population decline, and deer hunting actually decreased, which might have led to a rise in collisions — if not for the cougars.

“That was very striking,” she said. “When I looked at it, I was like, that looks like made-up data.”

Michelle LaRue, a University of Minnesota wildlife ecologist who is executive director of the Cougar Network, which tracks cougar recoloniza­tion in the Midwest, said she thought the study was “a really interestin­g step forward in understand­ing the benefits that we don’t think about when we think about mountain lions.”

At the rate they’re spreading, however, LaRue said she doesn’t expect cougars to repopulate the East anytime soon. Young males, which need to find their own territory to avoid being killed by other males, are the pioneers moving east more rapidly, she said. But females typically migrate in a slower “steppingst­one” pattern, moving to the next open patch and settling down there. Both genders are necessary, of course, for a self-sustaining population.

LaRue said research indicates that females will begin recolonizi­ng new parts of the Midwest in the next 25 years.

“That’s not very far in relation to the entire continent,” she said. “If it happens (in the East), it’s going to take a long time.”

That’s probably a good thing, given that people, Prugh said, might not be psychologi­cally ready for cougars in the eastern woods.

“What I would hope is that by making this fairly substantia­l benefit more concrete, people might be a little bit more accepting of them when they do show up,” she said.

Prugh and her colleagues considered some of the costs of new cougar population­s, including about $2.35 million worth of lost livestock and an unknown number of lost pets, though cougars, she noted, are “deer specialist­s,” and probably wouldn’t consider a house cat worth their time. Fewer than 30 people would be killed by cougars over 30 years, their study estimated.

“Having cougars in the East looks like it would actually save about five times as many lives through reducing deer-vehicle collisions as they would actually kill,” Prugh said. “People don’t stay awake at night worrying about crashing into a deer the next day, even though it could easily happen. But they might stay awake at night worrying about a cougar jumping on their back as they’re walking through their neighborho­od.”

The chances of that happening are extremely low, she said. But, she added: “People’s fear doesn’t really track the statistics well.”

 ?? NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ?? Mountain lions are also called cougars, pumas or panthers. Cougars, such as this one in the Santa Monica Mountains of Los Angeles, rely on deer as their main source of food.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Mountain lions are also called cougars, pumas or panthers. Cougars, such as this one in the Santa Monica Mountains of Los Angeles, rely on deer as their main source of food.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States