A 3-year-old mountain lion, the mom of two cubs, was struck and killed by a car on State Route 74 in Orange County, in line with the UC Davis California Carnivores Program.
The 2 cubs, one male and one feminine, are 14 months outdated — basically adolescents within the mountain lion life cycle. They have been nonetheless being sorted by their shy, small mom, dubbed F390, on the time of her demise on Sept. 4. The cubs would possible have stayed together with her for a number of extra months, studying the right way to hunt and navigate, earlier than occurring to stay independently, in line with Fernando Nájera, director of this system.
“It’s a essential time of their lives,” Nájera mentioned. “They’ve so much to be taught in a brief time frame and now they’re doing it and not using a mama.”
Nájera and his crew efficiently collared F390’s feminine cub on the night of Sept. 20, outfitting her with the identical sort of GPS monitoring gadget they placed on her mom to allow them to observe her actions and see how she fares within the wake of shedding her mother. The cub’s ID quantity is F436.
“This may permit us to see how she’s doing and tell us if we’ve got to place any measures in place to facilitate her survival,” he mentioned.
Nájera mentioned site visitors is the first menace to Southern California mountain lions, whose habitat has been fragmented and bisected by roads and highways. An estimated 100 mountain lions are killed by vehicles and vehicles every year, in line with the 2024 Roadkill Report performed by scientists at UC Davis.
The California Carnivores Program was based in 2001 to deal with Southern California mountain lion conservation, however has since expanded to incorporate different carnivore species. As a part of its work, the group places GPS gadgets on mountain lions to trace their actions throughout the state. The analysis is utilized in half to tell freeway planners and conservation organizations on the right way to stop vehicular deaths just like the one which befell F390. The group is presently monitoring 5 people — one male and 4 females, together with F436.
F390 had efficiently crossed Freeway 74 a number of instances earlier than her demise. Nájera mentioned her loss demonstrates the need of making secure crossings for wildlife in California.
Recognized variously because the Palms to Pines Scenic Byway, the Pines to Palms Freeway and the Ortega Freeway, State Route 74 runs from San Juan Capistrano in Orange County to Palm Desert in Riverside County.













