William Parcher
Show me the monkey!
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2005
- Messages
- 27,487
Answers to your questions are contained in this thread.
I'm a bit confused with this news. The USFWS already declared the Eastern Cougar extinct back in 2011 (the start of this thread). Now we have a news story saying they just declared it extinct this week.
If they declare it extinct,
And they remove it from the list,
Am I in the clear if I shoot one?
If they declare it extinct,
And they remove it from the list,
Am I in the clear if I shoot one?
You're in the clear if you shoot an adult.
Any jury would believe you were in fear of your life.
Just don't mention that the beast was throwing candy at you.
Mountain lion and cougar are different names for the same species. This thread is about an extinct subspecies called Eastern Cougar.I just read that in my local paper! At least, about the Mt. Lion. (Not the cougar. I think they are two different variations?) Regardless, funny thing is, my sister says she knows someone who got a picture of a mountain lion last month. (I noted that it was "last month," and that it is hearsay. I would have to see the picture.)
You are describing what is known as functional extinction. The USFWS has not found evidence for functional extinction, but instead has evidence for extinction itself.Even if the animal is not extinct, the population is so low, that it is unsustainable. It WILL be extinct, and nothing anyone can do about it.
The Eastern Cougar subspecies is extinct and so there aren't any around. That's the whole point about the agency declaring the subspecies to be extinct.Arisia said:Well, if it's off the endangered species list and there are still some around...
"It's extinct."
"No it's not. In fact, here's the body of one I shot last week."
"Well, it's extinct now."
It does seem a bit more rational to go out hunting something that's been declared extinct over something mythical, like bigfoot. You get the benefits of spending time in the woods with guns, not shooting anything, and no one flat out calls you crazy.
Eastern Cougar hoaxing is also in play. It has occurred before, occurs now, and will occur again in the future.6) Despite thousands of claims of cougars in the eastern US - within the former range of the Eastern Cougar - only a tiny handful have been confirmed as actual cougars. This means that earnest, honest people have been reporting (in some cases even photographing) cougars that weren't actually there.
These dispersing young cougars are males. A person could make money by betting on the gender of Western cougars that are found in the East. Always bet on male and always bet the house limit.7) Of the live cougars that have been confirmed, not one has been a real Eastern Cougar. The individuals have been confirmed as coming from South America through the pet trade or they are dispersing young cats from the population of Western Cougars.
Hey gang! thanks for watching, wow! I'm reading a lot of news stories that this was at my house in Kentucky.. No, shot while visiting friends who live right outside of Boulder.. Thanks again!
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The Eastern Cougar subspecies is extinct and so there aren't any around. That's the whole point about the agency declaring the subspecies to be extinct.
Many millions of people (the citizenry) have had many decades to show that the Eastern Cougar still exists. That has not happened. That matters. It matters a whole lot.
Absence of evidence is evidence of absence.
ShukerNature said:As for pictorial evidence, only one clear, unequivocal photograph of a black puma is known. Reproduced below, this photo depicts a dead specimen shot in 1959 by Miguel Ruiz Herrero in the province of Guanacaste along Costa Rica's north Pacific coast. Estimated to weigh 100-120 lb, its carcase is seen here alongside Ruiz's herdsman, but what happened to it afterwards is unknown.
I agree, but it would be an incomplete (or bad) plan if you just transplanted females into New England and then waited for wandering males to eventually get to the females which generally don't wander like the males do. Wouldn't a better plan be to transplant both genders at the same time?I would love for the catamount to be back in breeding numbers in New England (even if it has to be Western males wandering east, with young females intentionally reintroduced)
Oh, I quite agree, the Eastern subspecies is extinct. I was just explaining that shooting something that's not on the endangered list is still poaching if it's not 'in season' unless you're defending yourself.