Friday, May 17, 2024
45.0°F

Mountain lion family sent to new digs

by Jennifer Jackson Contributing Writer
| January 29, 2017 12:00 AM

photo

Photos courtesy of IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME A female mountain lion was captured along with her three kittens in the Johnny Creek area of Pocatello and later released in a more remote habitat.

A mountain lion family that made itself at home in a Pocatello neighborhood was relocated last week by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game personnel.

The state agency became aware Jan. 16 that the mountain lions had taken up residence in the Johnny Creek area.

Granted, mountain lion movements through the foothills of Pocatello are part of living in the urban/wildlife interface. However, this situation was unique in that mama mountain lion and her three kittens decided to really “move in,” taking advantage of the urban deer and other wildlife living in the area, and using people’s yards as their personal pantry for caching (storing) their kills. These factors made removal of the mountain lions necessary.

Fish and Game staff members, with the help of an experienced hound hunter, were able on Thursday, Jan. 19 to track and tree the three kittens, ranging in size from 35-50 pounds, Catch poles were used to extricate the cats from the trees and load them in large animal crates. The kittens were transported to the Fish and Game office for an overnight stay. Getting mom proved a little trickier. She escaped capture efforts until the next day.

Conservation officers returned to the same area Friday, Jan. 20, with the hound hunter and his dogs. The female mountain lion had come down to the property where her kittens had been captured and was feeding on the deer she had cached.

The female lion was treed, tranquilized, and carted back to the Fish and Game office.

With the mountain lion family reunited, Fish and Game transported and released the female and her kittens in a suitable and more remote habitat recently. The female was radio-collared so important information about her and her kittens’ movements, survival, and perhaps even the success of the release can be evaluated.

This is the first capture and release of an entire mountain lion family by Idaho Fish and Game in the southeast region.

Jennifer Jackson is a regional conservation educator employed with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game in the Southeast Region.