Los Angeles Times

Shuttle service to salvation

As cougars near ‘extinction vortex,’ advocates consider translocat­ion

- By Louis Sahagun

The future is looking increasing­ly bleak for some Southern California mountain lions.

Urban encroachme­nt, inbreeding, vehicle strikes, rat poison and wildfire have all taken their toll on cougars living in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana mountains.

Now, research published Wednesday suggests there’s an almost one-in-four chance the charismati­c cats could become extinct in those areas within 50 years.

In the face of such a dire prognosis — what biologists call an extinction vortex — conservati­onists are considerin­g a desperate and controvers­ial remedy: capturing pumas in one part of the Santa Anas and trucking them across the 15 Freeway so that they can breed with isolated mates on the other side of traffic.

“Wildlife managers never want to be a shuttle service for wild animals,” said Justin Dellinger, senior environmen­tal scientist with the Wildlife Investigat­ions Laboratory at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. “But translocat­ion has potential merit in the short term — after all it helped bring the critically endangered Florida panther back from the brink.”

Mountain lions are not endangered in California, but groups living in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana ranges now find themselves in genetic peril. Separated by freeways and lethal traffic, they are unable to range freely and are growing increasing­ly inbred, researcher­s say.

In the Santa Monica Mountains, the 101 Freeway exists as a near impenetra-

ble barrier to gene flow for a group of 10 mountain lions; In the Santa Ana Mountains, the 15 Freeway limits the movement of a family of 20 cougars.

Sometimes, the animals manage to cross freeways without getting hit. At least seven cougars have crossed the 15 Freeway near Temecula in the last 15 years, and one sired 11 kittens.

The fact that only one managed to reproduce, however, shows how difficult it is to diversify the gene pool for the lions still prowling the range.

A population viability study published in the journal Ecological Applicatio­ns predicts extinction probabilit­ies of 16% to 28% over the next 50 years for these lions, which have the lowest genetic diversity documented for the species aside from the critically endangered Florida panther.

Study authors note also that wildfire and disease could result in “catastroph­ic mortality” and further hasten the animals’ disappeara­nce.

However, extinction probabilit­ies were significan­tly reduced when computer models simulated the influence of two immigrant lions per year in areas blocked by developmen­t and freeways, according to a team of researcher­s that included Winston Vickers, an associate veterinari­an at the UC Davis Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center, and Seth Riley, an ecologist with the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.

Shuttling mountain lions from one area to another might be “an especially valuable option,” study authors wrote.

“Given the expense of erecting highway crossing structures, translocat­ion would certainly be a less expensive strategy, especially in the short-term.”

However, there exist numerous obstacles to the shuttle solution.

Translocat­ion of mountain lions is forbidden by state law. But state Department of Fish and Wildlife officials have not ruled out the possibilit­y of granting an exemption under certain conditions.

“It could be a slippery slope,” Dellinger said. “For instance, you can’t just turn a male mountain lion loose in new territory without making existent lions unhappy about it. There are also liability considerat­ions, as well as the worrisome possibilit­y that as soon as you let a mountain lion go on the far side of a freeway, it might try to cross back over.”

A translocat­ion program would also be controvers­ial and require fulfillmen­t of a mountain lion’s basic creature comforts. Among them, at least 200 to 300 mule deer per translocat­ed predator in order for it to, as Dellinger put it, “stay put in a given area.”

In some cases, wildlife advocates are opposed to the concept.

In the Santa Monica Mountains, conservati­onists say there is no need for translocat­ion. They say the problem can be solved with the constructi­on of a $60million wildlife overpass that crosses the 101 Freeway in Agoura Hills.

The bridge could help diversify the gene pool among the mountain lions remaining in the Santa Monicas south of the freeway as well as in the Simi Hills and Santa Susana Mountains to the north, they say.

Because the bridge crosses the freeway, Caltrans will oversee design and constructi­on — but the transporta­tion agency is not providing funding. Instead, roughly 80% of the funds are expected to come from private philanthro­py and corporate donations.

As of February, the fundraisin­g campaign had brought in about $7.5 million, including $1 million from the Annenberg Foundation, $250,000 from the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, $100,000 from Boeing Co. and $175,000 from an 80year-old couple in Kansas, National Wildlife Federation officials said.

“We believe about $30 million to $40 million of the funding will come in one check signed by a person who wants to see their name on the bridge,” said Beth Pratt, California director of the federation. Although the bridge was intended to be built by 2022, proponents say it could be delayed.

Farther south however, conservati­onists are open to the idea of translocat­ion, even as they work with the California Department of Transporta­tion on a relatively low-cost plan to improve 15 Freeway underpasse­s that would allow cougars freedom to roam.

Separately, conservati­on organizati­ons led by the Center for Biological Diversity, the Sierra Club, the Mountain Lion Foundation and Cougar Connection have sued the city of Temecula in Riverside County Superior Court for approving a proposed housing project that would encroach on wildlife corridors linking coastal mountains and protected nature reserves to the east.

Recently, three of the biologists leading the mountain lion recovery work in the Santa Anas stood on a hilltop just west of Temecula and gazed down on a weedy creek flowing from nearby mountains, under the 15 Freeway and then eastward past neighborho­ods, shopping centers, golf courses and condominiu­ms.

To the uninitiate­d, it was a mildly depressing vista of unbridled urban developmen­t. But that’s not what the people gathered on the hilltop saw.

“You’re looking at little Temecula Creek,” said Trish Smith, lead biologist of the Nature Conservanc­y’s efforts in the area. “The last natural wildlife corridor in this area and ground zero of our efforts to save a magnificen­t animal from extinction.”

 ?? Irvine Ranch Conservanc­y ?? COUGARS living in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana mountains could become extinct from those areas within 50 years.
Irvine Ranch Conservanc­y COUGARS living in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana mountains could become extinct from those areas within 50 years.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CONSERVATI­ONISTS are considerin­g capturing pumas in one part of the Santa Anas and trucking them across the 15 Freeway so that they can breed.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CONSERVATI­ONISTS are considerin­g capturing pumas in one part of the Santa Anas and trucking them across the 15 Freeway so that they can breed.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? WILDLIFE BIOLOGISTS have captured and put GPS tracking collars on cougars in the Santa Monica mountains to study the animals.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times WILDLIFE BIOLOGISTS have captured and put GPS tracking collars on cougars in the Santa Monica mountains to study the animals.
 ?? Irvine Ranch Conservanc­y ?? AN ADULT mountain lion leads three youths along a trail in the Santa Anas. Cougars in the Santa Ana and Santa Monica mountains are near an “extinction vortex” and could disappear from the areas within 50 years.
Irvine Ranch Conservanc­y AN ADULT mountain lion leads three youths along a trail in the Santa Anas. Cougars in the Santa Ana and Santa Monica mountains are near an “extinction vortex” and could disappear from the areas within 50 years.

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