|
ADOPT A COUGAR
COUGARS
Taxonomy:
Kingdom - Animalia
Phylum - Chordata
Subphylum Vertebrata
Class Mammalia
Order Carnivora
Family Felidae
Genus Puma
Species concolor
Sub-species:
Eastern Texas to
Florida P.c.coryi IUCN: Endangered, CITES:Appendix I
Northeastern US and
southeastern Canada Cougar P.c. couguar - IUCN: Endangered,
CITES: Appendix I
Central American
Cougar P.c. costaricensis CITES: Appendix I
Misc.:
The cougar has
the greatest natural distribution of any mammal in the Western
Hemisphere except for man.
The
cougar is extremely agile and has great jumping power and may leap
from the ground up to a height of 18 feet into a tree. It is a
good swimmer but prefers not to enter the water. Sight is its most
acute sense with a good sense of hearing, but is thought to have a
poorly developed sense of smell.
Size
and Appearance: The
cougar is the largest cat in the genus "felis", and is
comparable in size as the leopard. They vary in length from 59
108 inches with a tail length of 21 36 inches, and height from
23 28 inches at the shoulder. Weight can vary greatly, between
75 and 250 pounds. They have a long body with a small head, short
face, and a long neck and tail. They are powerfully built, and the
hind legs are larger than the front. The ears are small, short and
rounded.
Habitat: The
cougar thrives in montane, coniferous forests, lowland tropical
forests, swamps, grassland, dry brush country, or any other area
with adequate cover and prey.
Distribution:
Western North
America from British Columbia and south Alberta south through west
Wyoming to California and west Texas. Also south Texas, Louisiana,
south Alabama, Tennessee, and peninsular Florida.
Reproduction
and Offspring: There
is no fixed mating season, but in North America, the majority of
births occur between late winter and early spring. Females tend to
reproduce every other year, and give birth to litters of 1 6
(usually 2-3) kittens after a gestation of 90-96 days. Mothers
give birth to their young in dens that are lined with moss or
vegetation, usually in rock shelters, crevices, piles of rocks,
thickets, caves, or some other protected place. Kittens weigh
approximately 7-16 ounces at birth, and have spotted coats until
they are around 6 months old. They will continue to nurse for 3 or
more months, but will begin to take meat at 6 weeks. The kittens
will remain with their mothers until they are 1-2 years old, and
after separating, siblings will remain together for another 2-3
months. Females reach sexual maturity around 2.5 and males around
3 years. They will not begin to reproduce until they have
established themselves a permanent home area. The may remain
reproductive until 12 years of age for females, and 20 years for
males.
In
captivity, cougars have lived over 20 years, as compared to 8 - 10
in the wild.
Social
System and Communication: Cougars
are solitary cats and will avoid other individuals except for
during mating. They communicate by the use visual and olfactory
signals, and the males regularly make scrapes in the soil or snow.
Their vocalizations include growls, hisses, and bird-like
whistles. They purr like the domestic cats, and during estrus, the
females give off loud, hair-raising screams.
Hunting
and Diet: Cougars
primarily feed on large mammals, preferring deer, but they will
also eat Coyotes, Porcupines, Beaver, mice marmots, hares,
raccoons, birds and even grasshoppers. They kill by stalking to
within 30 feet of their prey before pouncing from its hiding
place. It leaps onto its victims back and bites into the neck
and holds with its sharp claws.
Principal Threats:
According to 2001 statistics provided from actual sales of hunting
permits, almost 2100 cougars are still being killed each year.
This figure does not include all the cougars killed by hunters who
do not buy licenses nor report their kills. Less than 6% of
our population are hunters but they kill over 100 million animals
each year for sport.
Status: CITES: Appendix I, USDI:
Endangered
|