The Shrike
Philosopher
Note: my wild speculation was not objective. I was trying to route the cat through the old family farm in the Mohawk Valley. (It's as good a route as any.)
Well, we might have a situation where W.Cougars repopulate the east due to movement. But again, that would merely be an eastern population of W.Cougar.There WAS a cougar and it had been on a 1,500 mile meander across half the country for several years now. Now it may have been simply an anomaly and will never happen again, but can we be certain of that? And, fine, let's say it doesn't happen again, what about Western Cougars moving, say, only 500 or 750 miles east.
Perhaps I missed your point then, but when you responded to drewbot withFine then. I'll shut up about it. I agree that Eastern Cougars are extinct. I always have. My posts were an attempt to engage in a discussion about the implications of migrating cougars and their impact on areas with large human populations.
Perhaps I should start a new thread about that.
Drewbot was pointing out that it was not and Eastern Cougar, and I got the impression that you thought that this was merely semantics rather than the point that drewbot was discussing taxonomy.You guys seem to be missing my point. This is what I mean by folks getting caught up in semantics.
Does it really matter if it was an Eastern or Western Cougar?
Wikipedia said:Until the late 1980s, as many as 32 subspecies were recorded; however, a recent genetic study of mitochondrial DNA[17] found that many of these are too similar to be recognized as distinct at a molecular level. Following the research, the canonical Mammal Species of the World (3rd edition) recognizes six subspecies, five of which are solely found in Latin America:[1]
Ah, a different argument altogether and one which I'd be inclined to agree with him on (since I have no dog (or cat) in this fight).What he might be getting at, and what is pointed out in the recent reccomendation to de-list the Eastern Cougar, is that the two species are not much different, in fact I have read that the genetic differences between the Eastern and Western subspecies is not significant enough to warrant sub-species designation.
Ah, a different argument altogether and one which I'd be inclined to agree with him on (since I have no dog (or cat) in this fight).
mikeyx said:I for one, am not advocating eastern cougars, its more like cougars are in the east, they are out there. They may have simply come east, but they are here...
Bigfooter said:The bottom line is that we now have proof that big cats exist in the Eastern United States outside of Florida.
But that does not appear to be the argument that Bigfooter and mikeyx are making.
Bigfooter said:The bottom line is that we now have proof that big cats exist in the Eastern United States outside of Florida.
Bigfooter said:I'm not proposing any others
Well, we might have a situation where W.Cougars repopulate the east due to movement. But again, that would merely be an eastern population of W.Cougar.Perhaps I missed your point then, but when you responded to drewbot with
Drewbot was pointing out that it was not and Eastern Cougar, and I got the impression that you thought that this was merely semantics rather than the point that drewbot was discussing taxonomy.
But that does not appear to be the argument that Bigfooter and mikeyx are making.
Cougars exist in the East and we have proof.
I'm not saying any cougars exist in the East.
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Cougars are not in the east.
A couple of cougars that got to the east somehow, does not allow such a broad statement, imo.
It is literally true, in that wild cougars have been found, but you can't really say much more than that.
Any cougar found in the East is an escaped pet, except for the outlier samples of western male cougars which have trekked into the area.Cougars do exist in the east, its the matter of how they get here. They're not all pets. Drew was wrong.
This is getting stupid, half full vs half empty. They are here, not in huge breeding numbers but that wasn't my argument, they are in fact here. The failed misdirect is they some have claimed the arguemnt is they are breeding here, not what I said. Regardless of how, watch the news, they ARE here. You guys are just dickering as to the how, and still claiming to be right. You're not.
It's all empty. A few are here, by odd chance. That's it.
Attempting to turn that into "Cougars are inhabiting the Eastern US" is folly.
There have been escaped pets living in the East, or there are some presently living in the East?