Advertisement

Found near a trailer park, P-75 is the latest Los Angeles mountain lion to be subject of study

Share

The Santa Monica Mountains have a new resident, a young female mountain lion that was caught wandering in a Pacific Palisades trailer park, officials said.

Dubbed P-75 by scientists, the mountain lion is the latest addition to their study tracking 10 lions in the Santa Monica Mountains. P-75, which is about a year old and a healthy 50 pounds, was seen taking shelter in a tree.

For the record:

12:30 p.m. June 27, 2019An earlier version of this article reported that scientists involved in the study were advocating for protected status for mountain lions. Environmental activists were seeking that protection. Also, two lions are known to have died in the Woolsey fire or from its impacts, not several, as this article previously reported.

The Los Angeles Police Department responded to 3 Kiki Place on Monday morning and secured the area while California Department of Fish and Wildlife officials arrived, said Peter Tira, a spokesman for the department. By the time they got there, P-75 had climbed down from the tree and found cover nearby.

Advertisement

She was found along a small retaining wall in a backyard, Tira said.

“We don’t know exactly where she came from,” he said, adding that she had likely left her mother only recently. “These lions often are the ones that get lost, take a wrong turn, end up in a populated area, get stuck somewhere they don’t want to be and sometimes need help getting back to wild habitat.”

Fish and Wildlife officials coordinated with the National Park Service to outfit her with a GPS tracking collar and ID tag. She was then released into the mountains, and officially added as a participant — though obviously not a voluntary one — in the study, officials said.

Officials say there is much to be gained from studying mountain lions like P-75. Two of them died as a result of Woolsey fire in November. In its history, 75 big cats have been part of the study — explaining the latest big cat’s designation.

Environmental activists involved in the study have pushed for protected status for the animals. They are not endangered, but the state Fish and Game Commission has said that six isolated and genetically distinct cougar clans from Santa Cruz to the U.S.-Mexico border comprise a subpopulation that is threatened.

Recent scientific studies suggest there’s an almost 1 in 4 chance that mountain lions could become extinct in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana mountains within 50 years.

alejandra.reyesvelarde@latimes.com

Advertisement

Twitter: @r_valejandra

Advertisement