Monday, August 8, 2022

Mountain Lions in New Jersey?

Despite many reported "sightings" and comments to posts on this site, New Jersey has never officially reported a mountain lion (cougar) being in the state in modern times. 

I thought I would update and re-post this 2020 entry because of all the recent comments of cougar sightings. There are two videos here of mountain lions which should give anyone who thinks they have seen one in the wild a better sense of what they would be seeing if a cougar was in front of them.


A Utah runner's October 2020 encounter with a female mountain lion 

There was a Reuters report from back in 2011 about a mountain lion killed on a Connecticut highway in Greenwich, which had led people to believe that finding one in NJ is not impossible. Genetic testing on that cougar showed it had come from South Dakota. That means it moved about 1500 miles eastward before being killed on the Wilbur Cross Parkway about 70 miles from New York City. Identification testing also showed that it had been in Minnesota and Wisconsin in late 2009 and 2010. 

Greenwich is only about a 40-mile journey away from a place like Alpine, NJ. Of course, the cougar has to deal with highways and make it over the Hudson River.

So, should we expect a mountain lion to make it to northern New Jersey one day? This was a rare case and is twice the distance any mountain lion was previously known to have gone. It was the first recorded confirmation of a wild mountain lion in Connecticut in more than 100 years.

We know that intensive hunting during the colonization of the Americas and human development of cougar habitat caused cougar populations to drop in most parts of their historical range. In particular, the North American cougar is considered to have been mostly extirpated in eastern North America (the population referred to as the eastern cougar) at the beginning of the 20th century. The exception is the isolated Florida panther subpopulation. Any reports in our area are thought to be misidentifications.

That Connecticut cougar in 2011 was rare and also ironic since that was the year that eastern cougars were unofficially deemed extinct by a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. But eastern U.S. reported sightings have come up in many states. Mark Dowling, co-founder of the Eastern Cougar Network said in 2003 that sightings in the eastern half of the nation, would "almost certainly" be escaped captives, but he added that the notion that western cougars "will eventually reach New Jersey" is a reasonable prediction, in part due to increased populations of white-tailed deer. Cougars found farther to the east than earlier are seen as being most likely of western origin.

The Cougar Network is a nonprofit research organization dedicated to studying cougar-habitat relationships and the role of cougars in ecosystems. The nearest confirmed sightings they list are in Connecticut.

The video above went viral and appeared widely on social media and TV this month showing a runner in Utah who was "stalked" by a mother cougar after coming too close to her and her cubs on a trail. He initially thought the animals were bobcats but the female mountain lion followed him for six minutes and then left on its own.

For now, I will say that your best chance to see one in our state is to visit Big Cat Country at the Turtle Back Zoo in West Orange. Seeing the big cats in person (or at least on the video below) would certainly help you actually identify one if you saw it in the wild. So, before you report a mountain lion (cougar, puma, catamount or any version of Puma concolor) to the authorities, check to see if it looks like the ones in these two videos. 

So far, no one has reported to me that they saw a jaguar in the state. You can see those at the zoo too.


16 comments:

Unknown said...

Do the mountain lions run in twos?

Anonymous said...

Not official.....there ARE cougars in South Jersey. Saw it and heard it with my own eyes. Dont believe everything you read....open your eyes

Anonymous said...

Greenwich, CT and Alpine, NJ are not 40 miles apart, they are 13 miles apart…

Anonymous said...

By roads, about 31 miles. By crow flying, closer. For a big cat working through wooded areas probably about 40. Cougars rarely drive. Or fly.

Unknown said...

i was just at Stokes forest in NJ 8/15/22, and finished up with the Sunrise Mountain hike and on the way back the drive down mountain about 25ft off the road was 1000% a mountain lion just hanging out. It started to move once it seen the car and once i put it in reverse it started to go deeper into the woods but stopped every few steps it stopped to look back at us.

Bob Scott said...

With everyone carrying a camera/phone with them at all times, why are there NO photos or videos of all these anonymous sightings? Evidence, please.

Anonymous said...

I 100% saw one walking back to my car from fishing at night in the late 90s over in bedminster on the Black River.

Anonymous said...

I believe I saw the back end of a mountain lion walking into a corn field off my sister’s property. In Lower Alloway Creek, NJ. Even though you say there are none in NJ, Bridgetown NJ ZOO has two of them, maybe one of them escaped? Idk, I do know it was not a coyote, it was big, muscle definition hind legs, long smooth tail, tan color. August 17, 2022 just before dust.

Anonymous said...

Ok so why does J&J site in Skillman, NJ post reports when Mtn Lions are sited locally? It is due the amount of walkers within and around there property. One of my deer Hunter friends have also captured these Lions on their cameras around the property they hunt.

Anonymous said...

I got off work at mid-night and one crossed in front of my Jeep. It was at 12:30am on Rt. 206, 100 yards south of the Burlington County Fair Grounds going west.

Anonymous said...

Where can we find more information on the identification testing? So interesting they can tell what state a cat was in at what year.

Tim Hoyt said...

Bob Scott, pictures have been taken of cougars (many are less than "crystal clear", it's true)...Cougars are largely nocturnal (dusk to dawn animals) and even if a picture is taken (in daylight) how does one prove that it was taken in New Jersey? (just wondering)..

Anonymous said...

My uncle came face to face with one in south jersey in 02....10 ft away solid black 200lbs...no joke

Lew Wallace said...

6am I was just driving down lake Rd in Vineland heading to work and my wife and I both see a mountain lion cross the street. We stopped where it entered the woods to see if we could catch a second look or a picture no luck it 100% was a big cat though..

Tim Hoyt said...

Interesting!.. I wonder how many cougars are in New Jersey? (South Jersey and Northwest Jersey)..

Ken Ronkowitz said...

Tim
Officially? There are none in NJ - although comments to this blog seem to disagree.