Los Angeles Times

Mountain lion’s remains are found

The cause of death of P-55, a 3-year-old male who had been in the news before, is unknown.

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com

A mountain lion who won fame after he was photograph­ed peering through the sliding glass door of a Westlake Village home has been found dead in the Santa Monica Mountains, the National Park Service said Wednesday.

The decomposed remains of P-55, a 3-year-old adult male, were found in his home region in the northweste­rn end of the mountain range, officials said.

The cause of death is unknown because his tracking collar failed to emit a “mortality signal” and his remains were too decomposed, said National Park Service spokeswoma­n Kate Kuykendall.

“Possible causes of death to this seemingly healthy animal include rodenticid­e poisoning or perhaps a fight with another male, although there were no signs of a struggle,” she said in a statement.

P-55 gained local notoriety in February when a Westlake Village family photograph­ed him trying to charge through their backyard sliding glass window to get to their dog.

After four attempts to get in, P-55 vanished into the night, KTLA reported.

Last summer, P-55 made the perilous journey twice across Highway 101, a crossing that has killed more than a dozen other mountain lions since 2003.

Barriers posted by the 101 and other freeways have helped limit the genetic diversity of local mountain lions.

 ?? National Park Service ?? P-55 twice made the dangerous journey across Highway 101, a crossing that’s killed a dozen other pumas.
National Park Service P-55 twice made the dangerous journey across Highway 101, a crossing that’s killed a dozen other pumas.

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