Post by Bobcat on Sept 5, 2003 6:15:19 GMT -5
Here is some basic information on mountain lions here in Texas. TPWD asks that you report all sightings and anytime one is shot. Courgars are considered a varmint in Texas. There is no season and you do not need a tag. All you have to have is a regular hunting license which is $23 for residents. Non-residents can get a 5-day Special Hunting license for $45, or an annual Special Hunting license for $125 which allows you to hunt non-game animals such as predators, hogs, javelina, exotics, and small game. TPWD License Information: www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publications/annual/hunt/licenses/
Mountain Lion
Order Carnivora : Family Felidae : Felis concolor Linnaeus
Description. A large, long-tailed, unspotted cat; body long and lithe; tail more than half the length of head and body, rounded in cross section, and black-tipped; claws long, sharp, and curved; soles haired, but pads naked; ears small, rounded, without tufts; upperparts and sides dull tawny, darkest on middle of back and tail; face from nose to eyes grayish brown; a pale patch above each eye; back of ear blackish; chin, lips, throat, and underparts whitish; underside of tail grayish white. External measurements of a large adult male: total length, 2.6 m; tail, 927 mm; hind foot, 259 mm. Total length of three males averaged 2.3 m; of females, 2.0 m. Weight of three males, 160-227 kg; of six females, 105-133 kg.
Distribution in Texas. Once statewide; now known with certainty, except for occasional occurrences northward, only in desert mountain ranges of the Trans-Pecos region, especially in Big Bend National Park, and in the dense brushlands of the Rio Grande Plain.
Habits. Mountain lions, frequently called pumas or cougars, formerly occurred in almost every kind of habitat within their range in which their chief prey species, deer, occurred. Now, because of continued persecution, they are nowhere common except in the most remote, thinly populated areas.
Retiring and shy by nature and nocturnal by habit, they are seldom seen in their native haunts. In more than 30 years of field work in areas known to be inhabited, we have seen only one of these large cats. In this instance, the animal was accidentally flushed from its daytime lair in a thicket.
These cats spend most of their time on the ground, but they are adept at climbing trees and often do so when pursued by dogs. Their chief range preferences are rocky, precipitous canyons, escarpments, rimrocks or, in the absence of these, dense brush. Heavily timbered areas usually are avoided. The presence of a mountain lion in an area can usually be detected by looking for scrapes, the signpost of the male, which consist of small piles of leaves, grasses, and so forth that he scrapes together and on which he urinates. These are best found on their travel routes along the ridges and rimrocks.
Contrary to popular opinion, mountain lions seldom use caves as dens. An area under an overhanging ledge, a crevice in a cliff, a dry cavity in a jumbled pile of rocks, an enlarged badger burrow, a cavity under the roots of a tree, or a dense thicket seem to be more desirable.
Their food is almost entirely animal matter but, as with domestic cats, grasses may be eaten occasionally. The chief item of diet is deer. Analyses of stomachs revealed that in the southwest, the mule deer accounted for 54% of the total food (by frequency of occurrence); white-tailed deer, 28%; porcupines, 5.8%; cottontails, 3.9%; jackrabbits, 2%; domestic cows, 1.6%; miscellaneous (including sheep, goats, skunks, foxes, coyotes, beavers, prairie dogs, and grasses), 4.7%. In certain areas they are known to kill and feed upon horses, particularly colts. In general, the mountain lion’s food habits are of neutral or beneficial character. The high percentage of predation on deer probably is beneficial from a game management view in most instances because the mountain lion tends to prevent overpopulation of deer, which is the bane of the game manager in many areas where this cat has been exterminated.
Mountain lions are solitary except for a short breeding period of up to two weeks duration, when the female is in estrous. The gestation period is about 3 months. The number of young ranges from two to five, averaging three. At birth, the kittens are woolly, spotted, have short tails, and weigh about 450 g each. They develop teeth when about a month old, are weaned when about 2 or 3 months old, and may remain with their mother until more than 1 year old. Adult females usually breed for the first time between two and three years of age, and breed once every two or three years afterwards.
At present, mountain lions usually are considered as unwanted predators. Their value as game animals has received little attention, but those who have hunted them with trained dogs vouch that the sport is thrilling and exciting. Some day we may see this animal recognized as a game animal, hunted in season, and under license — a position it should have now.
Mountain Lion
Order Carnivora : Family Felidae : Felis concolor Linnaeus
Description. A large, long-tailed, unspotted cat; body long and lithe; tail more than half the length of head and body, rounded in cross section, and black-tipped; claws long, sharp, and curved; soles haired, but pads naked; ears small, rounded, without tufts; upperparts and sides dull tawny, darkest on middle of back and tail; face from nose to eyes grayish brown; a pale patch above each eye; back of ear blackish; chin, lips, throat, and underparts whitish; underside of tail grayish white. External measurements of a large adult male: total length, 2.6 m; tail, 927 mm; hind foot, 259 mm. Total length of three males averaged 2.3 m; of females, 2.0 m. Weight of three males, 160-227 kg; of six females, 105-133 kg.
Distribution in Texas. Once statewide; now known with certainty, except for occasional occurrences northward, only in desert mountain ranges of the Trans-Pecos region, especially in Big Bend National Park, and in the dense brushlands of the Rio Grande Plain.
Habits. Mountain lions, frequently called pumas or cougars, formerly occurred in almost every kind of habitat within their range in which their chief prey species, deer, occurred. Now, because of continued persecution, they are nowhere common except in the most remote, thinly populated areas.
Retiring and shy by nature and nocturnal by habit, they are seldom seen in their native haunts. In more than 30 years of field work in areas known to be inhabited, we have seen only one of these large cats. In this instance, the animal was accidentally flushed from its daytime lair in a thicket.
These cats spend most of their time on the ground, but they are adept at climbing trees and often do so when pursued by dogs. Their chief range preferences are rocky, precipitous canyons, escarpments, rimrocks or, in the absence of these, dense brush. Heavily timbered areas usually are avoided. The presence of a mountain lion in an area can usually be detected by looking for scrapes, the signpost of the male, which consist of small piles of leaves, grasses, and so forth that he scrapes together and on which he urinates. These are best found on their travel routes along the ridges and rimrocks.
Contrary to popular opinion, mountain lions seldom use caves as dens. An area under an overhanging ledge, a crevice in a cliff, a dry cavity in a jumbled pile of rocks, an enlarged badger burrow, a cavity under the roots of a tree, or a dense thicket seem to be more desirable.
Their food is almost entirely animal matter but, as with domestic cats, grasses may be eaten occasionally. The chief item of diet is deer. Analyses of stomachs revealed that in the southwest, the mule deer accounted for 54% of the total food (by frequency of occurrence); white-tailed deer, 28%; porcupines, 5.8%; cottontails, 3.9%; jackrabbits, 2%; domestic cows, 1.6%; miscellaneous (including sheep, goats, skunks, foxes, coyotes, beavers, prairie dogs, and grasses), 4.7%. In certain areas they are known to kill and feed upon horses, particularly colts. In general, the mountain lion’s food habits are of neutral or beneficial character. The high percentage of predation on deer probably is beneficial from a game management view in most instances because the mountain lion tends to prevent overpopulation of deer, which is the bane of the game manager in many areas where this cat has been exterminated.
Mountain lions are solitary except for a short breeding period of up to two weeks duration, when the female is in estrous. The gestation period is about 3 months. The number of young ranges from two to five, averaging three. At birth, the kittens are woolly, spotted, have short tails, and weigh about 450 g each. They develop teeth when about a month old, are weaned when about 2 or 3 months old, and may remain with their mother until more than 1 year old. Adult females usually breed for the first time between two and three years of age, and breed once every two or three years afterwards.
At present, mountain lions usually are considered as unwanted predators. Their value as game animals has received little attention, but those who have hunted them with trained dogs vouch that the sport is thrilling and exciting. Some day we may see this animal recognized as a game animal, hunted in season, and under license — a position it should have now.