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Endangered Cougars Could Be Staging Comeback

MICHELE NORRIS, Host:

But North Country Public Radio's Brian Mann reports that this is a rare case where extinction may not mean the end of the line.

BRIAN MANN: One day in 1997, Ken Kogut was driving down a highway in New York's Adirondack Mountains, and he saw something that shouldn't have been there.

NORRIS: A mountain lion bounds out into the middle of the road and stops dead.

MANN: Cougars are supposed to be long gone from these valleys. But Kogut is a top biologist with New York's conservation department. If anyone is qualified to know what a mountain lion looks like, this is the guy.

NORRIS: It looked at me, and then with one bound, it literally cleared the other lane, cleared the shoulder of the road, landed in the ditch, and the last I saw was it running south with a long, black tail tip.

MANN: Bo Ottmann is a landscaper in Connecticut, who founded an organization in 2007 called Cougars of the Valley. He thinks the federal government knows that cougars remain in the Northeast. He thinks wildlife agencies don't want the hassle or expense of caring for the animals.

NORRIS: I think they just want to put it behind them. If they take the eastern cougar off the endangered species list, that means they don't have to protect them. They don't have to spend the money.

MANN: This debate has been raging for decades. Mark McCullough is the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's lead expert on eastern cougars. He acknowledges that people do sometimes think they see these big cats. He's convinced that mountain lions vanished as early as the 1930s, and most sightings are either mistakes or involve mountain lion pets released into the wild.

NORRIS: All these lines of evidence suggest that cougars do turn up from time to time, but the eastern cougar is extinct.

MANN: The other big development is that those western mountain lions have begun a long migration, spreading fast from states like Idaho and Wyoming and reaching as far east as Indiana. A lot of scientists think they'll eventually reach the East Coast.

NORRIS: Oh, I'd love to see them back here, because they're beautiful animals when they're hunting.

MANN: Ecologist Ray Curran trudges through spring snow in a pine forest in the Adirondacks. He points to a rugged bluff.

NORRIS: Looks like something you'd see in the Rockies. They're great places for wildlife to hide. And it looks like really good mountain lion habitat.

MANN: The Fish and Wildlife Service's Mark McCullough says this is, once again, prime cougar country.

NORRIS: We have areas in eastern North America that are large enough, have the right kind of habitat, adequate prey populations.

MANN: For NPR News, I'm Brian Mann in New York's Adirondack Mountains. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Brian Mann
Brian Mann is NPR's first national addiction correspondent. He also covers breaking news in the U.S. and around the world.