In November 2012, some Half Moon Bay residents reported cats under their porch. Mountain lion-type cats. Cougars. Pumas. Panthers. Catamounts. (The different names have political implications. I’ll try to use them randomly.) Sheriffs confirmed cats under the porch and called the California Department of Fish & Game (DFG).

The DFG advised keeping people and pets out of the area, and seeing if they would go away. They didn’t. (It was raining.) DFG game wardens came out. (Based on location, it’s possible these wardens usually dealt with marine species. Fish, mussels, squid. Licensing. Poaching. Not pumas.) Someone estimated the cubs were 10 months old and 25-30 pounds.

Photo: Larry Moats, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Public domain.

Let’s just say you didn’t see me and I didn’t eat you, okay?

DFG spokesperson Janice Mackey said the wardens noticed that the cats had “blank stares.” A sure sign of sociopathy. “Wardens were noticing that the cats were displaying some odd behavior,” she said. “Normally when we encounter lions and we give them a way out, we never see them again. These cats were acting very habituated, like they had been in the area quite awhile.”

As “a last resort,” the wardens shot them. “We gave the cats every opportunity to get out of there, but this was very much a public safety threat.” The tranquilizer option was rejected, because it takes a few minutes for animals to be knocked out, and they didn’t want agitated cougars near people and pets.

Although the DFG said the cubs were acting oddly, Rebecca Dmytryk of WildRescue said a few days later, “their described behavior, allowing humans to approach… is not unusual for motherless, starving, or otherwise desperate young.” (Disclosure: I volunteer with WildRescue, but I haven’t shown this post to anyone there. As a volunteer I’ve met nothing scarier than a teenaged skunk. Which was kind of blank-eyed, come to think of it.)

Photo: Trisha M Shears/Ltshears. Public domain.

(Captive animal.) Just don’t LOOK under your porch if you don’t want to know.

Almost a month later, the DFG released necropsy results. The cubs were about 4 months old, and weighed “13 and 14 pounds, a little bigger than house cats,” reported the San Francisco Chronicle. Actually, many house cats weigh more. The late Zeus Kaiser weighed 22 pounds.

So those were kittens. People were upset.

There was an [apology]. “With the necropsy reports, I now realize these animals were smaller than assumed,” said DFG director Charlton Bonam. “I regret this unfortunate incident in Half Moon Bay for all involved. The Department intends to learn from this experience.”

Tony Warrington, a DFG Assistant chief of enforcement, said, “In a perfect world, we would have had further non-lethal options available.” Bonam said the department was reviewing their guidelines on how to respond to mountain lion and bear reports.

Not a great apology. Bonham realizes that the animals were smaller than assumed? Indeed. The department should have – and could have – gotten better information before shooting. Someone who knew more about panther cubs could have been called in. He doesn’t address that issue.

Bonham “regret[s] this unfortunate incident” – that’s vague and distancing language. Who doesn’t regret an unfortunate incident?

Warrington’s “In a perfect world” doesn’t help. “In a perfect world” puts us on notice that this isn’t a perfect world, and it never will be perfect. There’ll always be something to cry about, so butch up, bunky.

But it was hopeful that they spoke of learning from the experience. DFG was clearly unhappy and embarrassed about the shooting and the reactions to it. That seemed sincere.

Photo: C.E. Price. Public domain.

Any menacing of humans that needs to be done, WILL BE DONE BY ME.

I didn’t write about this apology then because it was depressing – people hate kitten-blasting – and the apology didn’t help matters.

What could they have done instead of shooting the cubs? Without a mother, they were too young to fend for themselves. State law currently forbids rehabilitating and releasing catamounts, so if they were to live, it would have to be in captivity.

In January, state senator Jerry Hill (those cubs were in his district) introduced a bill to “require state Fish and Wildlife wardens to tranquilize and relocate errant pumas instead of killing them.” (On January 1, 2013, California’s Department of Fish and Game changed its name to Department of Fish and Wildlife.)

The bill would authorize DFW to work with veterinarians, wildlife conservation groups, and shelters in cases where cougars present potential human conflict. Which would mean involving people with the experience to tell a bewildered baby from a blank-eyed killer.

At the beginning of March, DFW announced a draft policy giving wardens leeway to do things with mountain lions besides shoot them. It establishes a team of experts for wardens to consult. It says they will study the feasibility of rehabilitation and release, in case that becomes legal. It shows DFW learning from experiences like Half Moon Bay, just as they said they would. You heard that right.

Photo: Jim Peaco, NPS. Public domain.

Please don’t take my picture while I am frolicking.

Mountain lions present a pile of issues. They kill people. Rarely, but they do. Everyone is against that. Sometimes they kill animals we own, livestock and pets, also widely unpopular. (Disclosure: my sister lives where there are pumas, most of whom live on deer. Sometimes one gets the idea to specialize in livestock. Twice, a cougar has killed my sister’s goats/sheep. Each time, it came back the next night for seconds, and was shot by a county trapper. I did not show this post to my sister. Nor to any panthers.)

Mountain lions are also dangerous to bighorn sheep populations. Sometimes a mountain lion will start to specialize in bighorns. Such a cat can make a horrible dent in a bighorn herd, especially if the cat is feeding cubs (and teaching them to specialize in bighorns). There’s a less obvious harm. Bighorns are worriers, and when they detect lion predation, they may move to higher, barer elevations, where it’s harder for the lions to sneak up on them – but where it’s also harder for the lambs, so fewer lambs survive.

A case-by-case approach makes sense, but the blow-them-all-away approach to catamounts has dominated for a long time. That’s why it’s illegal to rehabilitate and release cougars in most states. A few states have more nuanced policies toward Felis concolor.

In March a young mountain lion was noted hiding in a bush in an Almaden back yard. It was estimated to be 15-20 pounds. A DFW warden called Wildlife Emergency Services (WES) in for help in capturing it. The cub was netted, taken to a wildlife rehabilitation center, sedated, and examined. He was skinny, dehydrated, and covered with ticks. (WildRescue changed its name to Wildlife Emergency Services.)

Later he was transferred to DFW’s Wildlife Investigations facility. When he was in better shape, DFW sent him to Arizona, to live in the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum.

Another, older catamount was detected and captured in Santa Cruz in May. DFW supervised, with assistance from police, WES, and U.C. Santa Cruz’s Puma Project. He was collared and released “in a location nearby, but in much more suitable habitat.”

So although the DFW apology wasn’t very good, the follow-through was amazing. A government agency reviewed its policies, made changes, and put them into practice. Without delay. I’m impressed. Since “here’s why this won’t happen again” is a powerful part of apology, I’m going back to raise their grade.

 

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