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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Mountain Lions More Debatable Than Mythological


Letter to the Editor, Berkshire Eagle (published July 16, 2012)


Regarding the article on local legends in Sunday's Berkshire Eagle, I must say I found the brief discussion of the issue of mountain lions (aka cougars, puma, or catamounts) a little

disappointing. The subject of the existence of this species in the northeast is a complex and actively debated one among scientists, and I would urge care about lumping it into the category of myth and legend. To say that scientists agree that these animals were "last here in the 1850s"
is both vague and factually inaccurate, as there has been a diversity of positions expressed about this in the scientific community, though virtually all agree that cougars were certainly present in New England states long after that date, continued local sightings, and confirmed samples in neighboring counties. There is definitive documentation of members of the species killed in New England well into the 1930s, and there has never really been a lull in sightings since. While wildlife researchers associated with
universities and private foundations are much more receptive to the idea that there may remain breeding populations in remote pockets of the northeast, even state and federal wildlife officials who've been more opposed to this concept freely admit that many examples of individual mountain lions have been confirmed in recent years -more than 110, according to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service's chief researcher. While these public officials may be more likely than their non-governmental counterparts in the scientific community to attribute all such cases to escaped pets and miscellaneous migration from the western U.S., to my knowledge no one is denying that they are occasionally spotted in the wilds all over the region.


On a more local level, I would refer interested readers to extensive newspaper coverage of sightings around this county throughout the past century. From the panther reported in Williamstown in September of 1899, one spotted in North Pownal in 1926, dozens of sightings from Pittsfield and the surrounding area in the mid 1940s, Great Barrington in 1966, and deluges of reports in 2000 and 2008, the Eagle, North Adams Transcript and other local media have frequently reported on reliable accounts of these elusive tawny creatures in our midst. In addition to eyewitness testimony, the last decade and a half has yielded more definitive evidence of their presence all around us, from DNA confirmation of a scat sample found at the Quabbin Reservoir to a verified wild cougar struck by a car last summer in Greenwich, Connecticut last
summer.
While debate about whether all these proven occurences of mountain lions represent descendants of the original cats that prowled the east coast or some combination of escaped pets and redistribution from west coast distribution areas is likely to continue between researchers for years to come, it is folly to imply that the many Berkshire residents who've encountered them are all seeing things or telling tall tales.

Sincerely,
Joe Durwin

These Mysterious Hills
July 8, 2012

Images: Historic hoto of what was believed to be the last cougar shot in Vermont 1881; cougar hit by car in Greenwich, CT June 2011

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Joe, I dont know what happened to your facebook, but a friend of mine took a photo this past weekend of a mtn lion in Richmond. I wanted to share the photo with you.

Anonymous said...

October 20, 2012 I'm glad to hear that a catamount was sighted in Richmond. This afternoon, around 1:00PM my wife and I were driving on Rt 20 near Hancock Shaker Village (headed west) and saw one running away from the road in a large grassy field. We couldn't stop at the time, otherwise you would have a picture, but there were several other cars in both directions and they must have seen the cat as well.