Community Corner
Deformed Mountain Lion A Product Of Inbreeding In LA's Mountains
At least three mountain lions with crooked tails have been spotted in the local mountains, including one with a reproductive deformity.
LOS ANGELES, CA — Lions with crooked tails have been spotted in the Santa Monica mountains, an unsettling sign that inbreeding is taking its toll on the LA's big cat population.
Hemmed in by freeways, biologists have long known that inbreeding was a ticking time bomb for the local lion population. The capture of P-81, a lion with a kinked tail and a reproductive abnormality, is a critical discovery that shows the first physical manifestation of the lack of genetic diversity in the local mountain lion population. According to scientists, the discovery highlights the need for a planned wildlife crossing over the Ventura (101) Freeway in the Liberty Canyon area. In Florida, the only other place with lover levels of genetic diversity among lions, scientists imported female mountain lions in a successful effort to save their mountain lion population. Scientists aren't recommending that option in densely populated Los Angeles.
"This is something we hoped to never see," wildlife biologist Jeff Sikich said. "We knew that genetic diversity was low here, but this is the first time we have actually seen physical evidence of it. This grave discovery underscores the need for measures to better support this population."
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In March, biologosts captured and collared P-81, confirm that he has only one descended testicle, which could impact his ability to have offspring, according to the National Park Service, which has been studying the mountain lion population in the Santa Monica Mountains for nearly two decades.
Another lion with a kinked tail was spotted on camera in the same area just days later, and researchers believe it could be sibling of P-81. A third lion believed to have a kinked tail was also spotted in the eastern portion of the mountains.
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Researchers say the abnormalities are linked to "inbreeding depression," highlighting the danger facing the lions in the mountain range. A 2016 study prepared in conjunction with UCLA biologists predicted a nearly 100% chance that the lions will be extinct in the range within 50 years due to lack of genetic diversity.
"Along with a similarly isolated population in the Santa Ana Mountains south of L.A., we have seen the lowest levels of genetic diversity ever documented in the West," said Seth Riley, wildlife branch chief for Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area and an adjunct professor at UCLA. "The only population with lower levels was in south Florida a couple of decades ago, when Florida panthers were on their way to extinction. The really interesting, and worrying, thing is that they saw the same type of kinked tails and cryptorchidism there."
Cryptorchidism is when one or both testes fail to descend, leaving the animal unable to reproduce, according to the NPS.
In the case of the Florida panthers, which appeared bound for extinction due to the inbreeding, researchers imported eight female lions from Texas to widen the genetic diversity of the population. There are now about 200 mountain lions in that population, up from a low of 20-30, according to the NPS.
Riley said the discovery of the physical abnormalities in the Santa Monica Mountains lions highlights the need to open up the genetic diversity in the range, most urgently through the construction of a planned wildlife crossing over the Ventura (101) Freeway in the Liberty Canyon area, which will connect wildlife populations from both sides of the highway.
"The truth is that we want to build that connectivity not just for the mountain lions, but for all of the wildlife," Riley said.
City News Service contributed to this report.
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