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About this Guide

The Montana Animal Field Guide is a joint project between the Natural Heritage Program and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. Montana FWP, through its employees and citizen commission, provides for the stewardship of the fish, wildlife, parks and recreational resources of Montana, while contributing to the quality of life for present and future generations.


Felis concolor
Mountain Lion, Summer
Mountain Lion

Puma concolor
(Felidae)

Global Rank: G5
State Rank: S4

Agency Status
USFWS:
USFS: none
BLM: none
 

General Description
Coat gray to yellowish- or reddish-brown; colors usually deepest along back, with whitish shades on underside; head small and rounded with very short face; eyes set forward on head for sight hunting; ears short and rounded; body long and lithe; tail long, round, black-tipped; adult males weigh 150-190 lbs., females 70-120 lbs. Solitary, except for females accompanied by males or kittens; females den in caves, rock crevices; brush piles, etc. with kittens and leave them there while hunting; usually hunt by stealth at night and cover unused food for later use; males territorial, and large male home ranges may overlap smaller ones of females (FWP). A large cat with an elongate body, powerful limbs, small head, short face, short rounded ears, and long neck and tail; two color phases: buff, cinnamon, and tawny to cinnamon rufous and ferruginous, and silvery gray to bluish and slaty gray; young are buffy with dark spots, and the eyes are blue for the first few months; color of upperparts is most intense midorsally; sides of muzzle and backs of ears are black; underparts are dull whitish with buff wash across the belly; end of tail is dark brown or blackish; adult total length 171-274 cm in males, 150-233 cm in females; adult tail length 53-81 cm; mass 50-103 kg in males, usually 32-60 kg in females; greatest length of skull 172-237 mm in males, 158-203 mm in females (Nowak 1991, Hall 1981, Maehr 1992).

Diagnostic Characteristics
Differs from the jaguarundi in much larger size (maximum total length of jaguarundi is 137 cm). differs from the lynx and bobcat in having a much longer tail (less than 25 cm in bobcat and lynx). differs from other cats in lack of spotting in adult pelage. young mountain lion differs from the ocelot in having the spot not arranged in rows or chainlike streaks. see Hoffmeister (1986) for cranial differences between mountain lion and jaguar.

Economic Value
In 1989-1990, the sport harvest was 2176 in the western U.S. and western Canada (Hansen 1992). Sometimes preys on domestic livestock.

Migration
Non-migratory.

Habitat
Mostly mountains and foothills, but any habitat with sufficient food, cover and room to avoid humans (FWP). In W MT spring-fall ranges at higher elev than winter areas. Cover types in winter: 42% pole stands, 30% selectively logged (pole or mature), 18% seral brushfields (Murphy 1983). In E. MT apparently uses riparian and breaks (Matthews and Swenson 1982).

Food Habits
Deer, elk, and pocupines most important in Montana, but may take prey ranging in size from grasshoppers to moose (FWP). In Fish Creek Drainage, white-tailed deer appeared to be primary food, followed by elk, mule deer, and snowshoe hare (Murphy 1983). Will prey on porcupines.

Ecology
Harvest intensity in Fish Creek mostly deter. by snow cond. Road access, hunting pressure & prey base are mgmt concerns. Some areas require more conservative mgmt. than others. In Fish Cr: 4.3 adults/100sq km, 7.1 lions/100sq km (Murphy 1983)

Reproductive Characteristics
Breed any time, but young most commonly born in May; two to four spotted young born about every 2 years per female; females keep males away from kittens, which may otherwise eat them; females first breed at 2-4 years of age (FWP). In Fish Creek Drainage, litters raised at approximately 2 year intervals. Average 2.6 kittens/litter (Murphy 1983). Kittens may be born any season.

Citations & Sources
  • Foresman, K.R. 2001. The wild mammals of Montana. Special Publication No. 12. American Society of Mammalogists
  • Hansen, K. 1992. Cougar: the American lion. Northland Publ. Co., Flagstaff, Arizona. xiii + 129 pp.
  • Hoffmeister, D. F. 1989. Mammals of Illinois. University of Illinois Press. 349 pp.
  • Matthews, W. L., and J. E. Swenson. 1982. The Mammals of east-central Montana. Proc. Mont. Acad. Sci. 39:1-13.
  • Murphy, K. M. 1983. Relationships between a mountain lion population and hunting pressure in western Montana. M.S. thesis. University of Montana, Missoula. 48 pp.
  • NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life [web application]. 2002. Version 1.6 . Arlington, Virginia, USA: NatureServe. Available: http://www.natureserve.org/explorer. (Accessed: March 20, 2003 ).
  • Nowak, R. M. 1991. Walker's mammals of the world. Fifth edition. Vols. I and II. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore. 1629 pp.
  • O'Gara, B. Identification of Montana's Big Game Animals. Montana Outdoors.
 

This page is from the Montana Animal Field Guide. [http://fwp.mt.gov/fieldguide/speciesDetail.aspx?elcode=AMAJH04010]
Saturday, July 04, 2009 - 1:51:57 PM