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Figure
1. Adult male cougars stand about
30 inches tall at the shoulder. (Photo by Rich Beausoleil.)
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Sleek and graceful,
cougars (Puma concolor, Fig. 1) are solitary and secretive
animals rarely seen in the wild. Also known as mountain lions or
pumas, cougars are known for their strength, agility, and awesome
ability to jump. Their exceptionally powerful legs enable them to
leap 30 feet from a standstill, or to jump 15 feet straight up a
cliff wall. Cougars use their paws and claws to trip prey (i.e.
a swat to the rear legs) or grab it with their claws, then use their
claws to hold their prey while delivering the kill-bite. A cougar’s
strength and powerful jaws allow it to take down and drag prey larger
than itself (Fig. 2).
Cougars are
the largest members of the cat family in North America. Adult males
average approximately 140 pounds but in a perfect situation may
weigh 180 pounds and measure 7-8 feet long from nose to tip of tail.
Adult males stand about 30 inches tall at the shoulder. Adult female
cougars average about 25 percent smaller than males. Cougars vary
in color from reddish-brown to tawny (deerlike) to gray, with a
black tip on their long tail.
Cougars occur
throughout Washington where suitable cover and prey are found. The
cougar population for the year 2002 was estimated to be 2,400 to
3,500 animals. Statewide, the cougar population is likely declining.
The Department of Fish and Wildlife has nine management zones around
the state designated for “maintain” or “decline,”
and adjusts harvest levels accordingly.
Wildlife offices
throughout the state receive hundreds of calls a year regarding
sightings, attacks on livestock and pets, and cougar/human confrontations.
Our increasing human populations and decreasing cougar habitat may
create more opportunities for such encounters.
Facts
about Cougars
Habitat
and Home Range
- Cougars
use steep canyons, rock outcroppings and boulders, or vegetation,
such as dense brush and forests, to remain hidden while hunting.
- Adult male
cougars roam widely, covering a home range of 50 to 150 square
miles, depending on the age of the cougar, the time of year,
type of terrain, and availability of prey.
- Adult male
cougars’ home ranges will often overlap those of three
or four females.
- Female
home ranges are about half that of males and there in considerable
overlap in female home ranges.
- Often female
progeny will establish a territory adjacent to mother, while
virtually all males disperse considerable distances from the
natal area.

Click
image to enlarge
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Figure
2.
A cougar’s strength and powerful jaws allow it to take
down and drag prey larger than itself.
(From Verts and Carraway, Land Mammals of Oregon.) |
Food and
Feeding Habits
- Cougars
are most active from dusk to dawn, although they sometimes travel
and hunt during the day.
- Adult cougars
typically prey on deer, elk, moose, mountain goats, and wild
sheep, with deer being the preferred and most common prey.
- Other prey
species, especially for younger cougars, include raccoons, coyotes,
rabbits, hares, small rodents, and occasionally pets and livestock.
- A large
male cougar living in the Cascade Mountains kills a deer or
elk every 9 to 12 days, eating up to 20 pounds at a time and
burying the rest for later.
- Except
for females with young, cougars are lone hunters that wander
between places frequented by their prey, covering as much as
15 miles in a single night.
- Cougars
rely on short bursts of speed to ambush their prey. A cougar
may stalk an animal for an hour or more (Fig. 3).

Click
image to enlarge.
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Figure
3. Cougars are a stalk and wait predators and the majority
of prey is killed by a sudden explosive burst of speed with
the attack focused from the front shoulder forward, where the
cougar can grasp the neck to break the neck or suffocate and
kill.
(Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.) |
Daybed
Sites
- A cougar’s
daybed is used for rest, protection from the weather, and to
raise young.
- Cougars
don’t use dens like bears do. They may settle down for
up to six weeks while the kittens are immobile, but afterward
are almost always on the move, making daybeds as they go.
- In rough
terrain, daybeds are usually in a cave or a shallow nook on
a cliff face or rock outcrop (Fig. 4). In less mountainous areas,
day beds are located in forested areas, thickets, or under large
roots or fallen trees.
- Daybeds
are frequently near kill sites. No day beds preparation takes
place.
Reproduction
and Family Structure
- Cougars
can breed year-round, but breeding is more common in winter
and early spring. Several females may breed with a resident
male whose home range overlaps theirs.
- After 91
to 97 days of pregnancy, one to four (but usually two) kittens
are born.
- The bond
between male and female is short-lived (about ten days), and
the male cougar plays no role in raising the kittens.
- Kittens
stay with their mothers for 12 to 19 months following their
birth.
- Female
cougars usually breed every other year.
Click image
to enlarge. |
Figure
4. In rough terrain, cougar daybeds are usually in a cave
or a shallow nook on a cliff face or rock outcrop. An average
of two kittens are born every other year.
(From Christensen, Mammals of the Pacific Northwest: A Pictorial
Introduction.) |
Mortality
and Longevity
- The two
most common natural causes of death among cougars are being
killed by other cougars, or by the prey during an attack.
- Humans,
through hunting, depredation, and vehicle collisions, are probably
the main source of mortality among cougars.
- Male cougars
can live 10 to 12 years in the wild; females normally live longer.
Viewing
Cougars
Cougars make
their living by not being seen. In areas disturbed by humans,
these cats are most active during twilight and early morning hours.
(In dim light, cougars see up to six times better than humans.)
However, cougars can be active at dawn or dusk if prey is active
at that time.
Tracks
Cougar tend
to leave “soft” tracks, meaning the animals make very
little impact on the ground, and their tracks may be virtually
invisible on packed earth or crusted snow (Fig. 5). In addition,
to preserve their sharpness for gripping prey, these animals keep
their claws retracted most of the time, and so claw marks are
rarely visible in their tracks (Fig. 6).
Because cougars
carry their heavy tail in a wide U shape at a normal walk, in
snow, the lowermost portion may leave drag marks between each
print.

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Figure
5. Cougar tracks are about the size of a baseball, 3 to
3½ inches in diameter. Note the lack of claw marks,
which are visible in tracks left by members of the dog family.
(Photo
by Alan Bauer.)
Click
image to enlarge. |
Droppings
Cougars generally
cover their droppings with loose soil. When visible, their droppings
typically resemble those of most species in the dog and cat families.
However, cougars have well developed premolars that can slice
through bone and hide. Therefore, their droppings often show chunks
and fragments of chewed bone and considerable hair from the hide.
Members of the dog family gnaw on bones but usually don’t
chew them up into cut fragments.
Cougar droppings
are generally cylindrical in shape, segmented, and blunt at one
or both ends. An average dropping measures 4 to 6 inches long
by 1 to 1½ inches in diameter. The size of the dropping
may indicate the size of the cougar.
Feeding
Areas (caches)
Cougars usually
carry or drag their kills to a secluded area under cover to feed,
and drag marks are frequently found at fresh kill sites. After
killing a large animal and having eaten its fill, a cougar often
will cover the remains with debris such as snow, grass, leaves,
sticks, or soil. Even where little debris is available, bits of
soil, rock, grass or sticks may be used to cover the carcass.
The cougar may remain in the immediate vicinity of its kill, guarding
it against scavengers and eating it over a period of six to eight
days. (Meat becomes rotten quickly in the summer and male cougars
have to patrol their territory. Often these males will make a
kill, feed until full, leave to patrol the area, and return to
feed on the carcass days later.)
Do not approach
or linger around a recently killed or partially covered deer or
elk.
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| Figure
6. A cougar paw and a human hand. |
A cougar paw showing claw.
(Photos by Russell Link.) |
Scratching
Posts
Like house
cats scratching furniture, cougars mark their territory boundaries
by leaving claw marks on trees, stumps, and occasionally fence
posts. Claw marks left by an adult cougar will be 4 to 8 feet
above the ground and consist of long, deep, parallel scratches
running almost vertically down the trunk. These gashes rarely
take off much bark; tree-clawing that removes much bark is probably
the work of a bear. (Bobcat claw marks are normally 2 to 3 feet
above the ground; domestic cat scratching occurs at a height of
about 1½ to 2 feet).
Calls
Cougars hiss,
purr, mew, growl, yowl, chirp, and cry. The most sensational sounds
they make are the eerie wailings and moans heard at night during
mating season, especially when competing males have intentions
toward the same receptive female. Such wails have been likened
to a child crying, a woman’s scream, and the screeching
of someone in terrible pain.
Preventing
Conflicts
The cougar’s
ability to travel long distances occasionally brings these cats
into seemingly inappropriate areas, even places densely settled
by humans. Such appearances are almost always brief, with the
animal moving along quickly in its search of a suitable permanent
home. However, where humans are encroaching on wildlife habitat,
the number of cougar sightings and attacks on livestock and pets
is on the rise.
Cougar attacks
on humans are extremely rare. In North America, roughly 25 fatalities
and 95 nonfatal attacks have been reported during the past 100
years. However, more cougar attacks have been reported in the
western United States and Canada over the past 20 years than in
the previous 80. In Washington, of the one fatal and fifteen nonfatal
attacks reported here in the past 100 years, seven attacks occurred
during the 1990s.
A high percentage
of cougars attacking domestic animals or people are one- to two-year-old
cougars that have become independent of their mothers. When these
young animals, particularly males, leave home to search for territory
of their own, and encounter territory already occupied by an older
male cougar, the older one will drive off the younger one, killing
it if it resists. Some young cougars are driven across miles of
countryside in search of an unoccupied territory.
If you are
living in cougar country, prevent a conflict with them by using
the following management strategies around your property, and,
if possible, encourage your neighbors to do the same.
Don’t
leave small children unattended. When children are playing outdoors,
closely supervise them and be sure they are indoors by dusk. (See
“Cougars and Kids.”)
Modify the
habitat around your home. Light all walkways after dark and avoid
landscaping with plants that deer prefer to eat. Where a deer
goes, a cougar may follow. Shrubs and trees around kids’
play areas should be pruned up several feet to prevent cougars
from hiding behind them.
Although
costly and not 100 percent effective, a chain-link or heavy woven
wire fence that is 10 feet high with 3-foot extensions installed
at a 65-degree angle on each post may keep cougars out of an enclosed
area. To increase effectiveness, string barbed wire or four electric
wires between the extensions, alternating positive and negative
wires.
Don’t
feed wildlife and feral cats (domestic cats gone wild). This includes
deer, raccoons, and other small mammals. Remember predators follow
prey.
Close off
open spaces under structures. Areas beneath porches and decks
can provide shelter for prey animals. (See “Preventing
Conflicts” in Raccoons for information).
Feed dogs
and cats indoors. If you must feed outside, do so in the morning
or midday, and pick up food and water bowls, as well as leftovers
and spilled food, well before dark. Pet food and water attract
small mammals that, in turn, attract cougars.
Keep dogs
and cats indoors, especially from dusk to dawn. Left outside at
night, small dogs and cats may become prey for cougars.
Use garbage
cans with tight-fitting lids. Garbage attracts small mammals that,
in turn, attract cougars. See “Preventing
Conflicts” in Raccoons for information on garbage management.
Keep outdoor
livestock and small animals confined in secure pens. For a large
property with livestock, consider using a guard animal. There
are specialty breeds of dogs that can defend livestock. Donkeys
and llamas have also successfully been used as guard animals.
As with any guard animal, pros and cons exist. Purchase a guard
animal from a reputable breeder who knows the animal he or she
sells. Some breeders offer various guarantees on their guard animals,
including a replacement if an animal fails to perform as expected.
See “Preventing
Conflicts” in Coyotes for additional information on
livestock management.
Encountering
a Cougar
Relatively
few people will ever catch a glimpse of a cougar much less confront
one. If you come face to face with a cougar, your actions can
either help or hinder a quick retreat by the animal.
Here are
some things to remember:
- Stop,
pick up small children immediately, and don’t run. Running
and rapid movements may trigger an attack. Remember, at close
range, a cougar’s instinct is to chase.
- Face the
cougar. Talk to it firmly while slowly backing away. Always
leave the animal an escape route.
- Try to
appear larger than the cougar. Get above it (e.g., step up onto
a rock or stump). If wearing a jacket, hold it open to further
increase your apparent size. If you are in a group, stand shoulder-to-shoulder
to appear intimidating.
- Do not
take your eyes off the cougar or turn your back. Do not crouch
down or try to hide.
- Never
approach the cougar, especially if it is near a kill or with
kittens, and never offer it food.
- If the
cougar does not flee, be more assertive. If it shows signs of
aggression (crouches with ears back, teeth bared, hissing, tail
twitching, and hind feet pumping in preparation to jump), shout,
wave your arms and throw anything you have available (water
bottle, book, backpack). The idea is to convince the cougar
that you are not prey, but a potential danger.
- If the
cougar attacks, fight back. Be aggressive and try to stay on
your feet. Cougars have been driven away by people who have
fought back using anything within reach, including sticks, rocks,
shovels, backpacks, and clothing—even bare hands. If you
are aggressive enough, a cougar will flee, realizing it has
made a mistake. Pepper spray in the cougar’s face is also
effective in the extreme unlikelihood of a close encounter with
a cougar.
Professional
Assistance
Wildlife offices
throughout Washington respond to cougar sightings when there is
a threat to public safety or property. Problem cougars may be
live-trapped by trained fish and wildlife personnel and moved
to more remote areas; however, such removals are expensive, time
consuming, and seldom effective. Using tranquilizing drugs on
cougars to facilitate removal is difficult and dangerous for cougars
and humans. When other methods have failed, lethal removal of
problem animals may be the only alternative.
Contact your
local wildlife office for additional information, and in the case
of an immediate emergency, call 911 or any local law enforcement
office, such as the state patrol.
| Cougars
and Kids |
| Children
seem to be more at risk than adults to cougar attacks, possibly
because their high-pitched voices, small size, and erratic
movements make it difficult for cougars to identify them as
human and not prey. To prevent a problem from occurring:
- Talk
to children and teach them what to do if they encounter
a cougar.
- Encourage
children to play outdoors in groups, and supervise children
playing outdoors.
- Consider
getting a dog for your children as an early-warning system.
A dog can see, smell, and hear a cougar sooner than we can.
Although dogs offer little value as a deterrent to cougars,
they may distract a cougar from attacking a human.
- Consider
erecting a fence around play areas. (See “Modify
the habitat around your home.” )
- Keep
a radio playing when children are outside, as noise usually
deters cougars.
- Make
sure children are home before dusk and stay inside until
after dawn.
- If
there have been cougar sightings, escort children to the
bus stop in the early morning. Clear shrubs away around
the bus stop, making an area with a 30-foot radius. Have
a light installed as a general safety precaution.
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Public
Health Concerns
Cougars rarely
carry any communicable diseases that are regarded as threats to
humans in Washington.
Feline distemper
(Feline panleukopenia) antibodies have been documented
in Washington cougar populations, but the degree that the Feline
panleukopenia virus causes cougar mortality, or is transferred
to domestic cats, is unknown.
Legal
Status
Because the
legal status, hunting restrictions, and other information relating
to cougars change, contact your local wildlife office for updates.
Cougars are
classified as game animals and an open season and a hunting license
are required to hunt them (WAC
232-12-007). A property owner or the owner’s immediate
family, employee, or tenant may kill a cougar on that property
if it is damaging domestic animals (RCW
77.36.030). No permit is required.
The killing
of a cougar in self-defense, or defense of another, should be
reasonable and justified. A person taking such action must have
reasonable belief that the cougar poses a threat of serious physical
harm, that this harm is imminent, and the action is the only reasonable
available means to prevent that harm.
The body
of any cougar, whether taken under the direct authority of RCW
77.36.030, or for the protection of a person, remains the
property of the state and must be turned over to the Department
of Fish and Wildlife immediately.
| Precautions
for Hikers and Campers |
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Figure
7. To
avoid a close and unpleasant encounter with a cougar,
do not hike alone in cougar country. (Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife.) |
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| While
recreating in a cougar’s territory, you can avoid close
encounters by taking the following precautions:
- Hike
in groups and make enough noise to prevent surprising a
cougar.
- Avoid
hiking after dark.
- Keep
small children close to the group, preferably in plain sight
ahead of you.
- Do
not approach dead animals, especially recently killed or
partially covered deer and elk.
- Be
aware of your surroundings, particularly when hiking in
dense cover or when sitting, crouching, or lying down. Look
for tracks, scratch posts, and partially covered droppings.
- Keep
a clean camp. Reduce odors that might attract mammals such
as raccoons, which in turn could attract cougars. Store
meat, other foods, pet food, and garbage in double plastic
bags.
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Additional
Information
Books
Maser, Chris.
Mammals of the Pacific Northwest: From the Coast to the High
Cascades. Corvalis: Oregon State University Press, 1998.
Verts, B.
J., and Leslie N. Carraway. Land Mammals of Oregon. Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 1998.
Internet
Resources
Dangerous
Wildlife Complaints
Burke
Museum's Mammals of Washington
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