Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Colorado runner fights off, kills lion

- By Lindsey Bever

A runner in Colorado fought and killed an 80-pound mountain lion that attacked him on a nature trail in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, wildlife officials said.

Officials with Colorado Parks and Wildlife said the man was mauled by a “juvenile” mountain lion as he was running Monday on the West Ridge Trail at Horsetooth Mountain Open Space, a 2,700-acre park with hiking and biking trails not far from Fort Collins.

The man, who was not publicly identified, was bitten on his face and wrist but fought free from the lion, killing the animal in self-defense, according to a news release.

Officials said Tuesday morning that a necropsy showed that the man suffocated the animal.

“The runner did everything he could to save his

life,” Mark Leslie, northeast region manager for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, said later in the statement. “In the event of a lion attack, you need to do anything in your power to fight back just as this gentleman did.”

Officials said that the man stated he heard a noise behind him while he was running Monday afternoon and, when he turned around to see what it was, the lion “lunged” at him, causing serious injuries.

Ty Petersburg, area wildlife manager for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, said in the statement “the lion’s hunting instincts were triggered by the runner,” though, it’s unclear what the runner did to survive. He then got himself to an emergency room, officials said.

A spokeswoma­n for Colorado Parks and Wildlife did not respond to a request for comment from The Washington Post.

Mountain lions are described

as “calm, quiet and elusive” and though attacks are not common in Colorado, their interactio­ns with humans have increased in recent years because more people are moving into their habitat and using trails in those areas according to informatio­n from Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

In response to reports about aggressive mountain lions, state wildlife authoritie­s trapped and killed three of them last month in Glenwood Springs, about 175 miles southwest of Horsetooth Mountain, according to the Citizen Telegram.

Over the past century, fewer than a dozen people have died in attacks in North America and, over the past several decades, only three people have died in Colorado, according to the agency.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife urges people to never approach a mountain lion.

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