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progressoid

(50,790 posts)
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 10:56 AM Feb 2023

Iowa DNR confirms mountain lion shot, killed in Johnson County

SWISHER, Iowa (KCRG) - The Iowa Department of Natural Resources has confirmed a mountain lion sighting in Johnson County last weekend.

The DNR told KCRG-TV9 the mountain lion was shot by two lawfully licensed hunters who were out at night calling for coyotes west of Swisher.

The mountain lion was an adult female, weighing 116 pounds.

The DNR said it had been aware of the mountain lion prior to the shooting, but she was seldom if ever seen by people in the area and never caused safety issues for residents or livestock.

https://www.kcrg.com/2023/02/03/iowa-dnr-confirms-mountain-lion-shot-killed-johnson-county/

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Jirel

(2,259 posts)
2. Stupid and cruel.
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 11:00 AM
Feb 2023

Big cats are supposed to live here. They rarely bother anyone. An occasional farm animal taken by wildlife should be an accepted cost of business.

fishwax

(29,328 posts)
4. seems awfully deep in Iowa for a mountain lion to be wandering
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 11:05 AM
Feb 2023

I know they come into western Iowa from Nebraska occasionally, but even that is pretty unusual. Johnson County is nearer the eastern edge of the state.

brush

(58,059 posts)
10. Mountain lions/cougars actually range from the Canadian Yukon...
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 01:28 PM
Feb 2023

to the South American Andes. Not unusual at all in Iowa.

Seems very cruel to just kill her.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cougar

fishwax

(29,328 posts)
11. No, they are unusual in Iowa (which is far on the fringes of the path b/w Yukon and the Andes)
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 02:48 PM
Feb 2023

They're far more common in states further west, which provide the coverage that they like to move around in, and where they were able to find shelter when the advancement of settlers came to be a threat to them. They used to be more common on the plains, but during westward expansion settlers killed them off. Now they occasionally have some that wander in, but confirmed sightings are still pretty unusual.

As the image in your link shows, Iowa is well into in the "Extinct or Severely Reduced Populations" area.

Seems very cruel to just kill her.

Indeed.


Response to fishwax (Reply #11)

MontanaMama

(24,087 posts)
5. Lions are just about everywhere.
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 11:21 AM
Feb 2023

I have a friend who lives at the southern tip of Indiana…she’s got a small farm and had a documented lion kill on her place. They’re keeping it quiet because the nutters will wage war on it if word gets out.

Blappy

(140 posts)
13. Mountain lions are not protected in Iowa
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 04:04 PM
Feb 2023

I am not a hunter, so don't know if lawfully licensed only means that the hunter(s) just had a game license of some sort. It is sad, seems like the only reason for it was because 'they could'

Blappy

(140 posts)
8. This happened pretty close by where I live
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 12:30 PM
Feb 2023

maybe 10-15 miles away. I have wondered if there could be a mountain lion nearby, I've heard some sounds at night out here in the countryside that made me wonder...

progressoid

(50,790 posts)
9. There were multiple sightings around here last winter.
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 01:00 PM
Feb 2023

couple people had photos of huge paw prints in the snow. As far as I know it wasn't killed.

Blappy

(140 posts)
12. With all the deer around, seems like it would be sustainable
Mon Feb 6, 2023, 03:41 PM
Feb 2023

for cougars to be living. I really don't know what would be the extent of their range in such a situation, but obviously there would have to be enough individuals for their range to overlap in order for there to be an established population. There are certainly enough coyotes around, but they are adapting much more to areas of human settlements.

With Iowa being the most human-altered of the 50 states, it would be very surprising to me if there was a documented case of a mountain lion attack on a human within the past 100-120 years.

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