Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Ranchers get OK to deter cougars

State issues 2 permits to haze, 1 to kill after livestock fall prey in Northern California.

- By Terry Castleman

The killing of dozens of sheep and goats by mountain lions in a rural community in Northern California has forced ranchers and wildlife authoritie­s to navigate the boundaries between protecting the predator cat and preserving the rights of landowners.

The state Department of Fish and Wildlife issued several permits last week allowing ranchers to either scare off or kill the mountain lions believed responsibl­e for the surge in killings in Lake County.

“It’s been a day-to-day, hourly kind of situation. This is perfect mountain lion habitat. These lions belong there,” said agency spokespers­on Peter Tira. “At the same time, we’re trying to be as supportive and helpful to property owners as possible.”

On Jan. 5, a property owner in Lower Lake — a town of about 1,000 residents on the south side of Clear Lake, northwest of Sacramento — asked Fish and Wildlife for “a lethal depredatio­n permit to kill a lion due to the loss of 23 sheep” the previous night, Tira said.

Officials from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, working with Fish and Wildlife, visited the site and confirmed the presence of separate mountain lion tracks that suggested a group of three, possibly a mother and two adolescent­s.

The property owner instead was approved for a nonlethal depredatio­n permit, which allows for the deployment of deterrents and some hazing, which can include using dogs to scare the lions away.

“We try to resolve the conflict first before any lethal measures” are taken, Tira said.

A report from Fish and Wildlife said that in 2021, 90% of the 182 mountain lion depredatio­n permits issued in California were nonlethal. In 1996, the department estimated that there were 4,000 to 6,000 mountain lions in the state. Since 2014, the agency has been working on updating the population estimate, per its website. “Mountain lions are legally classified as a ‘specially protected species,’” the site says.

On Jan. 6, a neighbor of the first property owner in Lower Lake requested a depredatio­n permit after losing five goats and a sheep. That neighbor, too, was issued a non-lethal permit on Jan. 7. That night, mountain lions struck again.

On Sunday, the neighbor requested and was granted a lethal permit after the loss of four additional livestock: a goat, a sheep and two lambs. The total livestock toll in Lower Lake was 33 animals.

The lethal permit allowed a Lake County trapper to enter the property of the neighbor and trap and euthanize an adolescent male lion Monday. Later that day, trail cameras on the property captured images of two more lions, and the property owner reported a missing lamb the next morning.

The same property owner requested a second lethal permit, which Fish and Wildlife denied, citing needed improvemen­ts in the livestock enclosures. The owner needed to “step up the deterrents and protection­s,” Tira said.

On Jan. 11, a third property owner, in Kelseyvill­e — a town of around 3,500 residents about 15 miles northwest of Lower Lake — reported losing a goat and chasing a group of mountain lions off the property.

Officials did not know whether these mountain lions were the same as those they had engaged with in Lower Lake.

With a nonlethal depredatio­n permit, the Kelseyvill­e property owner put up a trail camera. Around 5 a.m. Thursday, the camera spotted a pair of mountain lions. Trappers with the USDA brought dogs to haze the big cats.

Over the course of an hour, the dogs got on the scent of a female mountain lion and scared her into a tree. The dogs were then allowed to bark at the lion, a common hazing method.

“Hopefully that mountain lion gets the message: It might not be a good idea to go back there,” Tira said.

If the hazing fails to keep the predators away, authoritie­s are considerin­g other strategies, including trapping and tagging the lions so officials can alert landowners when threats are near. The tags can also help test the effectiven­ess of the hazing conducted Thursday.

Moving the lions elsewhere was not under considerat­ion, Tira said. “Other lions will move in if we move these ones out.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? IN MALIBU, a rancher’s 2016 receipt of a permit to kill P-45 drew an outcry. The big cat got a reprieve.
Associated Press IN MALIBU, a rancher’s 2016 receipt of a permit to kill P-45 drew an outcry. The big cat got a reprieve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States