Los Angeles Times

Puma that killed Chihuahua? P-22

L.A.’s famous big cat stalked and snatched the dog, National Park Service confirms.

- By Nathan Solis

A mountain lion that killed a Chihuahua on its leash after quietly stalking a dog walker in the Hollywood Hills this month is the famed big cat P-22, the National Park Service confirmed Monday.

For over a decade, the puma has captivated Angelenos, recorded by doorbell and security cameras while strolling in and around Griffith Park and on residentia­l sidewalks. With the large radio tracking collar around his neck, P-22 is instantly recognizab­le as he roams the hills. But the feline celebrity recently reminded the world that he’s still a wild animal.

P-22 killed the Chihuahua as it was walking on a leash with a dog walker on Nov. 9, according to the National Park Service, which monitors mountain lions in the region.

“Based on video footage and GPS tracking collar data, we know P-22 was the animal responsibl­e for the attack,” the agency said in a statement Monday.

The chances of a human being attacked by the cougar are still very slim, according to experts.

“You’re more likely to be struck by lightning than attacked by a mountain lion,” said Beth Pratt, regional executive director of the nonprofit National Wildlife Federation. “But there is never zero risk.”

Grainy video of the attack, first reported by KTLA-TV Channel 5, showed the dog walker with two dogs being followed by a mountain lion in the narrow streets of the Hollywood Hills. Staying low to the ground, the cougar stalked the group before he attacked

Piper, a Chihuahua mix, according to the station.

The attack occurred near the Hollywood Reservoir, the National Park Service said. The 12-year-old P-22 is the oldest cat in the agency’s study. For years, P-22 has quietly eked out his existence in a nine-square-mile area of Griffith Park and nearby residentia­l neighborho­ods.

The park service said this is the first time it is aware of a mountain lion attacking a pet on a leash in the Los Angeles area, but there have been incidents reported in Colorado and other parts of Southern California.

P-22, like most other mountain lions, is an opportunis­tic predator, Pratt said.

“They are stealth predators,” she said. “They’re called ‘ghost cats’ for a reason. This is how they get their prey. It’s not like the vision of lions in Africa that chase down their prey on the plains.”

As a pet owner herself, Pratt is saddened for the dog and its owner. But pets can resemble a mountain lion’s natural prey, she said. In behavior familiar to owners of pet cats, P-22 stalked the walker and the dogs before he pounced, Pratt said, but he didn’t show any aggression toward the walker once he got the dog.

“It’s sad that P-22 killed a beloved pet,” she said. “But he doesn’t know that. He was just being a mountain lion.”

Such attacks are rare, Pratt said. P-22 has adapted and charted his own course around human activity. The 123-pound big cat has maintained a nocturnal existence around his usual stomping ground near the Hollywood sign in Griffith Park.

Researcher­s believe P-22 is originally from the Santa Monica Mountains, born to another tagged lion, P-1, and an unnamed female.

In 2012, he found his way across the 405 and 101 freeways to reach Griffith Park.

P-22 has managed to avoid being hit by any vehicles during his Griffith Park residency, and, though he suffered a bout of mange caused by rat poisoning in 2014, the lion remains healthy today.

He’s made the occasional foray into the Hollywood Hills, and in 2015 he baffled biologists when he settled into a crawl space under a Los Feliz home.

Then, just as abruptly as he appeared, he left that neighborho­od.

In March, he roamed near the Silver Lake Reservoir, pushing outside his usual hunting grounds.

This latest incident was unique, but the conditions were right for a puma, the National Park Service said.

The attack took place in full darkness, about 90 minutes after sunset. Typically, P-22 hunts deer and coyotes in Griffith Park. A few weeks before he killed the Chihuahua, P-22 took down a large buck in the park, officials said.

Mountain lions generally avoid large urban areas and are fearful of humans, but they will occasional­ly wander through frontyards. Mountain lions hunt domestic dogs and other pets that are lost, off their leash or wandering alone, according to wildlife studies. Mountain lions have attacked pets in their yards and even ventured into a garage and a house in what the National Park Service called “two unusual instances.”

“There is no evidence that preying on pets is related to an increased chance of an attack on a person, either in mountain lions or in other urban carnivores such as coyotes,” the park service said.

“Mountain lion attacks on humans are exceedingl­y rare, although they do occur.”

The agency reminds pet owners to keep their animals indoors, to be alert of their surroundin­gs and to supervise pets around dusk or dawn when predators are most active. If a person does encounter a mountain lion outdoors, they should keep their pet close, make themselves seem as large as possible, make noise and not run.

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