Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Wildfires pose new danger to mountain lions

Other panthers, vehicles threats on escape

- By Louis Sahagún

LOS ANGELES — Conservati­onists have long warned that Southern California mountain lions could vanish within decades due to inbreeding and loss of habitat. Now, biologists have identified another threat that could hasten their demise — extreme wildfires.

In a paper published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, UCLA researcher­s found that the 2018 Woolsey fire had greatly increased the odds of a mountain lion being struck fatally by a motorist or killed by a fellow panther in a territoria­l dispute.

The reason? Mountain lions were so eager to avoid the 100,000-acre burn zone that they chose instead to cross busy roadways within the Santa Monica Mountains or enter the hunting grounds of other adult pumas.

The research paints a grim portrait of the mountain lion’s struggle for survival as its habitat is increasing­ly limited and divided by developmen­t. It also raises concerns about the potential effectiven­ess of a longplanne­d wildlife crossing that seeks to provide mountain lions with safe passage over a 10-lane freeway, in part so that they can mate with pumas from other areas and increase genetic diversity.

The researcher­s found that in the 15 months after the fire burned from the Simi Hills of Ventura County to the beaches of Malibu, potentiall­y lethal road and freeway crossings by radio-collared mountain lions increased from three to five per month.

They also found that the distances the animals roamed had doubled — growing to 342 from 155 miles per month — greatly increasing the risk of deadly clashes between mountain lions over shrinking territory.

Complex trade-off

The UCLA study suggests that the changes in behavior by mountain lions are probably due to a complex trade-off balancing the necessity to acquire food and breed against avoiding encounters with humans in the fire-stripped mountainou­s landscape.

Ambush predators such as mountain lions, lynx and African lions require the cover of dense native vegetation to successful­ly stalk prey and avoid territoria­l disputes, a major cause of mortality among young cougars in the Santa Monica Mountains.

However, one habit that hasn’t changed is the species’ strong aversion to heavily populated urban centers. After the Woolsey fire, the study says, mountain lions continued to spend only about 5 percent of their time in urban areas.

The behavior shift that researcher­s observed could hinder human efforts to restore gene flow among the small, isolated population­s of cougars trapped south of the 101 Freeway in the Santa Monica Mountains and cougars confined to the north in the Simi Hills and Santa Susanna Mountains.

Specifical­ly, the planned Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing, which will cross the 101 Freeway at Liberty Canyon Road in Agoura Hills, is located in the Woolsey fire burn scar.

Is it possible that mountain lions might not use the 200-foot-long, 165-foot-wide bridge if they are avoiding the burn zone?

“That’s a fair question,” said Seth Riley, a biologist with the National Park Service and co-author of the study. “We hope that doesn’t happen.”

Saving a species from extinction

To date, more than 5,000 individual­s, foundation­s, agencies and businesses from around the world have contribute­d more than $92 million for the project.

When it is completed in 2025, the bridge will be the largest and most expensive of its kind in the world — and the only one designed to save a species from extinction.

“All it takes is a mountain lion crossing the freeway safely every few years to spark the kind of genetic dispersal they so desperatel­y need to survive,” Riley said.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? National Park Service biologist Jeff Sikich uses radio telemetry to listen for mountain lions. A male and a female with two kittens had been spotted before.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times National Park Service biologist Jeff Sikich uses radio telemetry to listen for mountain lions. A male and a female with two kittens had been spotted before.

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