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Sunday, November 10: Franklin Park Zoo will open at 11:00 a.m. due to the Boston Half Marathon that will go through Franklin Park. We look forward to seeing you!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Cougar

Puma concolor


Tune into our live cougar cam!

You can control the cam by clicking the control-button-webcam button in the lower right corner of the viewing window.

About the Cougar

conservation status: least concern

Geographic Range:

range map

Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Felidae
Genus: Puma
Species: concolor

The cougar, also known as a mountain lion or puma, is tawny, gray, or reddish in color depending on where it lives. Its long hind legs enable it to leap up to 15 feet high and lengths of 40 feet. Its large, padded feet allow it to stalk prey without making a sound. Despite its large size, the cougar is considered a “lesser cat” because it doesn’t roar like the “big cats” do.

Cougar Facts

Appearance:
Cougars are tawny, gray or reddish depending on where they live.  Cougars living closer to the equator tend to be smaller and redder; those living away from the equator are larger and gray or tan in color. They are concolor, meaning their fur is a uniform color without spots. Their front feet are larger than their back feet, and their hind legs are longer than their forelegs. This enables them to leap heights of 15 feet and 40 feet across. Their large, padded feet allow them to stalk prey silently. Their tails and bodies are long, and their heads are proportionally small. Their skulls are short and rounded, and they have powerful jaws and strong teeth to capture and eat large prey. Despite their large size, cougars are considered “lesser cats” because they don’t roar like the “big cats” do.

Size:
Cougars reach between 48 – 60 inches in length, with their long, slender tails making up one-third of their body length.  Males weigh between  110 – 200 pounds while females weigh between 80 – 130 pounds.

Diet:
Cougars are opportunistic eaters (they’ll eat what comes along), though their primary prey is deer.

Reproduction:
Cougars are polygamous, and females won’t mate until they’ve established a territory, which usually takes place between 3 and 4 years of age. Gestation lasts between 82 and 96 days, with one to six cubs (three to four on average) born between April and September. Cubs are born with a spotted coat and blue eyes. They wean at 40 days of age, but will remain with their mother up to a year. They reach sexual maturity by age 2. Females usually give birth every other year.

Behavior:
Cougars are solitary animals, and they come together only to mate. They’re very territorial, defending a wide range.  They spend their days hunting, often ambushing prey from a hidden vantage point in trees or behind rocks.

Habitat/Range:
Although the cougar’s United States range has diminished over the last century, they have the widest distribution of any land mammal in the Western Hemisphere. They range from the Yukon in Canada through the western portion of United States and small portion of the eastern United States to Patagonia. Cougars are found in all habitats from lowlands to mountainous regions and from deserts to tropical forests.

Life expectancy:
In the Wild:  8 – 13 years
In Captivity:  21 years

Threats in the Wild:
Though cougars are a top predator, humans are their biggest threat. Their populations are also increasingly fragmented and they are losing genetic diversity among their species.