Mountain lion that crossed freeways died
after California wildfire
Send a link to a friend
[December 08, 2018]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A Southern
California mountain lion that crossed freeways dozens of times, evading
potentially deadly traffic, has died after burning its paws during a
wildfire, officials said on Friday.
The 4-year-old mountain lion, which biologists had tracked with a GPS
collar and had named P-64, was roaming in the Simi Hills, northwest of
Los Angeles, when the fire broke out nearby, Jeff Sikich, a biologist
for Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, said in a
statement.
It apparently crossed an area burned by the Woolsey Fire, which erupted
on Nov. 8 and scorched 97,000 acres (39,000 hectares) before being fully
contained nearly two weeks later.
Biologists later followed P-64's movements over several miles before it
hunkered down. On Dec. 3, Sikich discovered P-64's remains, paws burned,
near the cat's last known GPS location.
The predator's exact cause of death was not known. The California
Department of Fish and Wildlife was set to conduct a necropsy.
The mountain lion could have escaped the fire's path by venturing into
the streets of Oak Park, a suburb between Los Angeles and Thousand Oaks,
but instead P-64 stepped into a fresh burn area in its wildland habitat,
officials said.
Mountain lions rarely venture into urban areas, and P-64's actions
demonstrate they prefer to stay clear of populated areas, even in the
midst of a disaster, National Park Service spokeswoman Kate Kuykendall
said by phone.
[to top of second column]
|
An adult male mountain lion known as P-64, walks through a tunnel
heading south in this National Park Service photo captured near the
Santa Monica Mountains, California, U.S., May 22, 2018. Courtesy
National Park Service/Handout via REUTERS
P-64 may have avoided homes, but was famous for braving traffic.
It was the only big cat biologists had observed consistently
crossing the 101 Freeway to escape and re-enter the Santa Monica
Mountains, Kuykendall said. It had traversed the 101 Freeway 14
times and crossed the 118 Freeway further north 27 times.
P-64 is believed to have fathered four cubs born in May, the
National Park Service said in a statement. Biologists have not been
able to confirm whether the cubs or their mother survived the fire.
Since 2002, biologists have been tracking a number of mountain
lions, including P-64, to study how they survive in a natural
environment where human habitats are encroaching.
"It's very unfortunate that he was seemingly so successful surviving
in this fragmented landscape and then died in the aftermath of a
devastating wildfire," Sikich said.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; editing by Bill Tarrant, Steve
Orlofsky and Bill Berkrot)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|