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Information About

North American Cougar




  Name North American Cougar
  Status CR
  Trend unknown
  Status System iucn31
  Regnum Animal ia
  Phylum Chordata
  Classis Mammal ia
  Ordo Carnivora
  Familia Felidae
  Genus '' Puma ''
  Species '' P Concolor ''
  Subspecies '''''P c couguar'''''
  Trinomial ''Puma concolor couguar''
  Trinomial Authority ( Kerr , 1792)


The North American Cougar (''Puma concolor couguar''), is the Cougar subspecies once commonly found in eastern North America and still prevalent in the western half of the continent. As well as several previous subspecies of Cougar of the western United States , ''Puma concolor couguar'' encompasses the remaining populations of the '''Eastern Cougar''', where the cat was almost universally referred to by the name '''Panther''', the only unequivocally known of which is the Critically Endangered Florida Panther population. Many extinct populations, such as the '''Wisconsin Cougar''', which died out in 1925 , are also included in the subspecies.

Several populations still exist and are thriving in the Western United States , but the North American Cougar was once commonly found in eastern portions of the United States and Canada . It is believed it was completely extirpated in the early 1900s. Some mainstream scientists believe that small Relict populations may exist (around 50 individuals), especially in the Appalachian Mountains and eastern Canada , but this idea is far more often found in the Protoscientific field of Cryptozoology , and also forms a common theme in American Folklore . Other theories ascribe modern sightings to a Feral breeding population of former pets, possibly Hybrid izing with native North American Cougar remnants, or claim that cougars from the western United States have been rapidly expanding their range eastwards.

Despite a wealth of hard evidence, sightings of cougars in the eastern United States are not as uncommon as they once were. Cougars with offspring have been sighted in Maine and Vermont in the past fifteen years. There have been verified cougar tracks and kills found in some states, including New York, which has had numerous sightings in the Adirondack and Catskill mountains. While most may be former captive animals released or escaped, the possibility of a sustained breeding population either incumbent or from migration is not out of the question.1


SOURCES

  • Wright, Bruce S. The Eastern Panther: A Question of Survival. Toronto: Clarke, Irwin and Company, 1972.



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