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Near Cle Elum,Wash., biologist Ben Maletzke, right, measures the teeth of Jane, a tranquilized cougar, with the help of Jamie French, one of two students along on the tracking trip last month. Jane is part of a healthy cougar population that lives in relative harmony with its human neighbors in the rapidly growing communities just east of Snoqualmie Pass. Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times

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Stepped-up hunting may be intensifying cougar-human conflicts

Friday, March 21, 2008 6:25 AM PDT

By Sandi Doughton
The Seattle Times

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CLE ELUM, Wash. - Jane the cougar is having a bad day.

Ben Maletzke, the cougar biologist, couldn't be happier.

After days of chasing the crafty animal, his team of hounds finally ran her up a tree, where Maletzke could take aim with his tranquilizer gun.

Now, the predator powerful enough to take down a bull elk is lying helpless under a tent of fir trees while Maletzke replaces the batteries in her radio collar, checks her teeth and measures her girth.

Jane is part of a healthy cougar population that lives in relative harmony with its human neighbors in the rapidly growing communities just east of Snoqualmie Pass.

In the past six years, Jane has killed deer less than 50 paces from homes, yet residents don't even realize she's there. She has never harmed pets or livestock, nor have any of her offspring.

The story is different in northeastern Washington, where the state has stepped up hunting in response to soaring numbers of complaints about cougars, including two attacks on toddlers. A bill signed by Gov. Chris Gregoire last week could expand the cougar killing.

But startling results from studies such as Maletzke's question this traditional approach to cougar management.

Instead of reducing conflicts between cougars and humans, heavy hunting seems to make the problems worse, says Robert Wielgus, Maletzke's graduate adviser and director of Washington State University's Large Carnivore Conservation Laboratory.

"It goes against the grain of what we've been doing for decades," Wielgus says.

Killing large numbers of cougars creates social chaos, Wielgus and his students found. Trophy hunters often target adult males, which act as a stabilizing force in cougar populations. The adults police large territories and kill or drive out young males. With the grown-ups gone, the "young hooligans" run wild, Wielgus says.

"Every time you kill a dominant male, about three of these young guys come for the funeral."

Evidence suggests cougars under two years of age, just learning to live on their own, account for the majority of run-ins with people and domestic animals. "You don't get to be an old cougar by doing stupid stuff like hanging out in back yards and eating cats," Wielgus says.

In the Selkirk Mountains at the confluence of Washington, British Columbia and Idaho, Wielgus and his students discovered the cougar population was actually crashing at a time when everyone assumed it was booming because complaints were off the charts.

Hunters had killed all the older males. Then they targeted adult females, whose numbers were plummeting. "About all that was left were these teenagers, and that could well be the reason there were so many complaints even though there weren't many cougars," Wielgus says.

Another project focused on a smaller area in the Colville National Forest, also in northeastern Washington, where the state opened emergency hunts to reduce cougar numbers in response to complaints. But the cougar population didn't drop at all. Instead, young males from a hundred miles around moved into the territories vacated when adults were killed.

"The only change is that the problematic component - the younger males - increased," Wielgus said.

By contrast, the cougars Maletzke studies along the Interstate 90 corridor have been subject to light levels of hunting. Yet conflicts are rare.

"When you've got a population of smart, resident cats, that's a stable situation," he says.

'Respect for that cat'

Sometimes Maletzke wishes the cougars weren't quite so clever. Jane has learned how to lead the dogs in circles and leave them barking up the wrong tree.

"We've got a lot of respect for that cat," Maletzke says as he sets out on his fourth attempt this winter to nab her.

He pulls his truck to the side of the road and holds up a small antenna, trying to pick up a signal from the cougar's collar.

Sporadic beeps lead him to a hillside above the Yakima River. Maletzke and his assistants strap on snowshoes while dog handler Dallas Likens unloads his three fastest hounds. The dogs' frenzied barks explode like gunshots in the cold air. They strain at their leashes, dragging Likens behind them.

Most hunters used to rely on dogs to track and tree cougars, which are so elusive they are otherwise hard to find and shoot. But in 1996, Washington voters overwhelmingly passed a citizen initiative that banned the practice, which some consider cruel.

If voters thought they were putting an end to cougar hunting, though, they were wrong.

The number of cats killed by hunters in Washington has climbed in recent years, exceeding levels in the 1950s when the state paid a $75 bounty to encourage eradication.

Before 1996, hunters killed an average of 156 cougars a year. Since the initiative, the harvest rate increased more than 40 percent, to an average of 225 animals a year.

That's because state wildlife managers, worried cougars would proliferate when hound-hunting ended, liberalized the rules for so-called "boot" hunters: Those who walk or drive the woods primarily in search of deer or elk.

The state raised the bag limit to two cougars, doubled the length of the season, and cut the cost of a cougar tag to $10. Before the initiative, the state issued about 600 cougar permits annually. Now, more than 60,000 hunters have license to kill cougars every year.

State lawmakers also enacted several bills to allow hound hunting in counties where complaints about cougars killing livestock or menacing people were high leading to the heavy kill rate in northeastern Washington.

One unintended consequence of the new rules is a growing toll on female cougars. Whereas hound hunters selectively targeted large males, or toms, "boot" hunters tend to shoot any cougar they run across.

"Killing big adult males is not a good thing," Wielgus says. "But once you start killing off females, there's nowhere to go but down."

The state is revising its game-management plan and considering quotas to reduce the number of female cougars killed, says Donny Martorello, carnivore-section manager for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

The agency also is weighing the research that suggests heavy hunting may aggravate cougar problems but is waiting for more solid evidence, Martorello says.

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Slanted Seattle Article wrote on Mar 21, 2008 7:44 AM:

" I'm not surprised this is from the Seattle PI. First of all "trophy" hunters take the Large males. What a crock! ALL hound hunting in Washington is for special Safety removals. These hound hunters can take only animals the Dept. wants them to--that's the good thing about hounds. If the DWF says only kill young males, then that is all that is killed. Let every other cat go free, hopefully smarter, like the one in the article that is chased and captured multiple times. No wonder these cats are not a problem. They are scared of dogs, because they are chased by dogs. Cougars and bears need to keep their fear of humas by being chased by dogs. "

fourty year hunter wrote on Mar 21, 2008 11:51 AM:

" Every hunting unit in the state could have a dozen harvest season and not even put a dent in there population.The last three hunting seasons,I have seen more mountain lions than large bucks!the deer populations are so low these cats are now working on the young elk you cant even find a spike bull in any of the herds. I had to dispatch a young forked horn bull last year because his neck and back were torn open so badly!If WSFW does nothing about this large popultion of omni predators What are these large medium and small cats going to eat after the game is gone. probly your cats dogs and kids "

Killing Machines wrote on Mar 21, 2008 1:23 PM:

" Please go to the video link below.
The cougar are as efficient at killing and wasting game as the animals shown in the video. The video also shows how the greenies and tree huggers don't get the whole story, they just want things their way.
http://www.saveourelk.com/ "

Woodsman wrote on Mar 21, 2008 2:50 PM:

" The cougar has a place in nature, but it needs to be managed as a game animal. Tree huggers don't understand how vicious and efficient a cougar is at killing. Take your house cat, and look how many birds, mice, rabbits, and snakes they kill. Now increase your house cat to the size of a cougar and the kills are just as frequent, but with much bigger game. Cougars are excellent hunters and love to kill. They leave partially eaten carcasses scattered throughout their territories. "

country gal wrote on Mar 21, 2008 3:45 PM:

" Regarding the deer population so low, could it be there's too many hunters out there taking away the food chain for these predators? "

reply to country gal.. wrote on Mar 21, 2008 3:49 PM:

" Could you please cite your proof of this "low deer population"? "

country gal wrote on Mar 21, 2008 4:01 PM:

" I have no proof; I'm reading it from "forty year hunter". Don't you read all the comments? "

Gamey Jamie wrote on Mar 21, 2008 4:07 PM:

" There's always plentiful meat, er... I mean game around the parts I hunt. "

crowsfeet wrote on Mar 21, 2008 4:59 PM:

" I was walking down a logging road just outside of Ryderwood last spring and a large cougar walked onto the road about 200 feet in front of me and my better half, we had two small dogs with us. It turned, lowered its head and stared at us, I was about ready to have a heart attack. It turned back and slowly walked off into the woods. I would say I enjoyed being that close, but it really did scare me. "

small minded folk wrote on Mar 21, 2008 5:42 PM:

" Won't it be great when something comes along to properly manage the human population? We can't even manage ourselves, yet we try to play god over everything else. What an awesome day it will be when the "Martians" come down and indiscriminately kill and eat most of us! "

country gal wrote on Mar 21, 2008 7:10 PM:

" Crowsfeet, that's a memory I bet you'll never forget including your better half!
"

re:To cg wrote on Mar 22, 2008 9:02 AM:

" I have hunted in these areas for forty years and my family has for a hundred .We have never seen populations of deer and elk so low it went from seeing fifty deer a day to 3-4 deer a day once they stopped hunting with dogs.there are less hunters now than there were twenty years ago.and there is no sign of disease in these areas.we have seen some horribie evidence of what these animals do with an over population of them! "

country gal wrote on Mar 22, 2008 3:45 PM:

" I don't have any qualms about hunters hunting as long as it is done in fairness and balance. About there are less hunters out there, I have friends who are avid hunters for years, my dad one of them. They don't hunt anymore because of too many "crazies" shooting without checking to see if it's a deer or elk. Maybe that's why there's less hunters. "

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