Subscribe free to our newsletters via your




FLORA AND FAUNA
Freeways as fences, trapping the mountain lions of Los Angeles
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 21, 2014


Our remote camera recently captured P-13 and her 10-month-old kittens, P-28 and P-30, on a kill in Malibu Creek State Park. The three of them spent two nights sharing their meal of mule deer. After investigating more than 400 kill sites during our study, we found that mule deer accounted for 95 percent of mountain lion kills. Image courtesy National Park Service.

That mountain lions have managed to survive at all in the Santa Monica Mountains of California-in the vicinity of the megacity of Los Angeles-is a testament to the resilience of wildlife, but researchers studying these large carnivorous cats now show in the Cell Press journal Current Biology that the lions are also completely isolated, cut off from other populations by the freeway.

According to the researchers' analyses, only one young mountain lion successfully dispersed into the Santa Monica Mountains in a decade.

Due to their almost complete isolation, the Santa Monica mountain lions show dangerously low levels of genetic diversity, the study shows.

The circumstances have also made the Los Angeles-area cats incredibly sensitive to individual behaviors. That single male that immigrated in 2009 and successfully mated substantially enhanced the genetic diversity of the entire population all on his own.

"Many of these phenomena, including very low genetic diversity and close inbreeding, have only been previously seen in Florida panthers, an endangered and completely isolated population of mountain lions," says Seth Riley of the National Park Service.

"In our case, the fact that lions in the Santa Monica Mountains are completely surrounded by roads and development likely lead[s] to behaviors that would be rare or nonexistent if normal population and social processes could occur."

Among those behaviors, Riley and his colleagues found evidence of close inbreeding events between fathers and daughters and of intraspecific killing, even of offspring, siblings, and mates, all behaviors that the researchers suspect would be rare or nonexistent if sufficient movement between populations was possible.

While one male lion moved into the Santa Monica Mountains during the study period, to the researchers' knowledge not a single young mountain lion has successfully dispersed out, when normally 75% of young lions-all of the males and half of the females-would likely disperse. Riley says the one possible exception that proves the rule is a single male "who dispersed likely from the Santa Monica Mountains out to Griffith Park, where he lives in a tiny dead-end home range."

Increased connectivity is critical for the long-term survival of mountain lions and other wildlife in the region, Riley says.

Unfortunately, no one was thinking about that 60 years ago when the Los Angeles freeway was built.

As a result, Route 101 is a development corridor, with very little natural habitat on either side. Riley says the National Park Service, the California Department of Transportation, and other local agencies have been working for over a decade to try to obtain the funds for a wildlife crossing, ideally an overpass, for carnivores.

On the bright side, that one successful male immigrant shows that it might not take many successful crossings to get wild populations in much better shape at the genetic level. Otherwise, the future is easy to predict, Riley says.

"If wildlife connectivity is not considered and planned for, or improved in places like southern California where it has mostly been lost, large carnivores, which exist at very low densities and need to move great distances, will not persist."

.


Related Links
US National Park Service
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Power plant in Vermont serving host to 200 endangered bats
Middlebury, Vt. (UPI) Aug 20, 2014
Some 200 little brown bats have made their home in Green Mountain Power's hydro power facility in Middlebury, Vermont. Officials with the state's Fish & Wildlife Department alerted the company to the bats' presence after a local resident called in to say he'd seen bats flying out of the building every night. "I think it's fun that we have bats in our hydro," Green Mountain Power spokesw ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Families wage citizen campaign to solve MH370 mystery

UN warns of 'massacre' in besieged Iraq Shiite town

Governor stands down National Guard in US riot town

Japanese PM visits Hiroshima after killer landslides

FLORA AND FAUNA
Arianespace serves the Galileo constellation

ESA and CNES experts ready for Galileo's first orbits

New delay for launch of Europe navigation satellites

First operational Galileo GPS satellites integrated for Soyuz launch

FLORA AND FAUNA
Neanderthals and humans interacted for thousands of years

Science team criticizes adoption of 'novel ecosystems' by policymakers

Japanese 111-year-old becomes oldest man

8,000-year-old mutation key to human life at high altitudes

FLORA AND FAUNA
Microbes can create dripstones

Cities help spiders grow bigger, multiply faster

Bats bolster brain hypothesis, maybe technology, too

Freeways as fences, trapping the mountain lions of Los Angeles

FLORA AND FAUNA
UN vows central role in fighting 'exceptional' Ebola epidemic

Unusual discovery leads to fascinating tuberculosis theory

Seals, sea lions help bring tuberculosis from Africa to Americas

CHIKV Challenge Asks Teams to Forecast the Spread of Infectious Disease

FLORA AND FAUNA
China court frees man after six years on death row

Speaking in tongues: China divided over the common language

China 'cult' members on trial for McDonald's killing: court

Five Tibetans die after China police shooting: group

FLORA AND FAUNA
Hijacked Singaporean ship released near Nigeria: Seoul

Chinese fish farmer freed after Malaysia kidnapping

US begins 'unprecedented' auction of Silk Road bitcoins

Malaysian navy foils pirate attack in South China Sea

FLORA AND FAUNA
Japan's economy shrinks after sales tax rise

The economy of bitcoins

Asia's most expensive home per square foot on sale in Hong Kong

Global art market in rude health




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.