Slide Shows | Evolution

How to Restore the Florida Panther: Add a Little Texas Cougar [Slide Show]

Introducing female cougars from Texas has helped the Florida big cats rebound

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FLORIDA PANTHER
thumb: FLORIDA PANTHER

FLORIDA PANTHER

FLORIDA PANTHER
A male Florida panther walks down a road in the middle of Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park. Puma populations in the state have rebounded from roughly 25 in the early 1990s to roughly 100 today....[More]

MAMA & KITTENS
thumb: MAMA & KITTENS

MAMA & KITTENS

MAMA & KITTENS
The introduction of eight female pumas from Texas has helped reduce inbreeding and resulted in more offspring, as evidenced by this mother and her three, still-dependent kittens, captured by an infrared-trigger camera in Picayune Strand State Forest in July 2006....[More]

PANTHER KITTEN
thumb: PANTHER KITTEN
PANTHER KITTEN

PANTHER KITTEN
Researchers take blood and other samples from young kittens, such as the three-week-old pictured here in Picayune Strand State Forest in July 2006.

[Link to this slide]
© Science / AAAS
KITTY LITTER
thumb: KITTY LITTER

KITTY LITTER

KITTY LITTER
A litter of three Florida panther kittens was sampled in Everglades National Park in June 2006. "You can pile up kitten samples pretty quick," says wildlife biologist Dave Onorato of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission....[More]

ADULT SAMPLE
thumb: ADULT SAMPLE

ADULT SAMPLE

ADULT SAMPLE
Scientists also sampled adult Florida panthers by hunting them (not to kill, just to obtain genetic data) with specially trained hounds....[More]

COLLARING THE BIG CAT
thumb: COLLARING THE BIG CAT

COLLARING THE BIG CAT

COLLARING THE BIG CAT
Treed cats are also outfitted with radio collars, if possible; 182 animals have been collared since the program began in 1981....[More]

CAT COLLAR
thumb: CAT COLLAR
CAT COLLAR

CAT COLLAR
This male panther wears the radio collar that allows researchers to track his whereabouts.

[Link to this slide]
© Science / AAAS
HABITAT DESTRUCTION
thumb: HABITAT DESTRUCTION

HABITAT DESTRUCTION

HABITAT DESTRUCTION
The biggest challenge facing the Florida panther may no longer be inbreeding but rather continuing habitat loss as the region's population of humans grows and expands into swampland once dominated by the big cats....[More]

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3 Comments

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  1. 1. outsidethebox 08:34 PM 9/25/10

    When this practice started it was sold to the Florida public as a means of "saving" the florida panther. Well time has shown most of the gene pool in florida is now from texas panthers. Of course it was fairly obvious that there was never was such a thing as florida panthers - just panthers who happened to live in florida. So why exactly are we perpetuating this fraud?

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  2. 2. tarwater 07:23 PM 9/26/10

    Restoration of the Florida Panther is simple -- reduce the human population in the Panther's historic range and stay the hell out.

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  3. 3. bucketofsquid 11:06 AM 9/29/10

    Rejoice! Falling fertility and birth rates in industrialized nations will soon lead to decreasing populations. This will allow nature to recover.

    Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this
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