Photo courtesy of SMPD |
On another late afternoon drive
in the same area, I came upon several deer in the roadway. They calmly looked at me in my car,
completely unafraid. I sat and watched
them graze on either side of the roadway, until they disappeared down a hill.
Once, up late reading and
writing on a summer night, I heard a commotion in my fenced-in and vine-covered
backyard. I came out with a flashlight
and saw nothing amiss on the patio. Upon
shining the beam up into the trees, I saw a constellation of twinkling yellow
lights. They were not stars but
eyes. I counted at least a dozen tree
rats using the branches as a rodent expressway to the fruit trees in the yards
up and down the block. One of them
eventually found my car engine and made a nest in a wheel well to catch some
residual warmth. I have also seen
possums back there, including one juvenile who had obviously fallen from the
trees. The mother sat on a thick limb
directly over the patio, waiting for me to disappear so she could mount a
rescue.
Driving home late at night in my
neighborhood, I have slammed on the brakes for a family of raccoons living in a
storm drain. A few weeks later, walking
after dark, I passed the spot and heard wicked growling and thrashing in the
bushes. The mother raccoon was not happy
that I had invaded her space.
Black bear tranquilized in Glendale (Raul Roa/Glendale News Press) |
I tell these stories not because
they are unique, but because in Los Angeles ,
they are commonplace, everyday occurrences.
And if you talk to people long enough, you will hear far more
frightening encounters with wildlife than my rather pedantic tales. I know people who have watched their small
dogs torn to pieces by coyotes. Blackbears make regular appearances in urban neighborhoods to swim in pools and eat
from garbage cans. Joggers and hikers
have been attacked by mountain lions in the hills around the city. And that brings me to the 75-100 poundmountain lion who decided to take an early morning stroll in downtown Santa Monica just a few blocks from the beach. The animal paid for his indiscretion with his
life.
According to an article in the Santa Monica Patch, this two-year old
mountain lion would have died anyway, even if he was successfully tranquilized
and transported back into the mountains.
Reporter Jenna Chandler quotes Jeff Sikich of the National Parks Service
who told her that “Nearly every one of the handful of mountain lions of the
same age tracked by the park service since 2002 in the Santa
Monica Mountains
has died while trying to establish his own home range.”
The cat was simply doing what
comes naturally: at a certain age, the
male lions must find their own space.
The area above Santa Monica
is saturated with the big cats right now, so it is difficult for a youngster to
find his own territory. If he had been
able to find a suitable spot, with so many mountain lions prowling around, this
often leads to a lack of genetic diversity and inbreeding. Mountain lions usually turn back when
encountering people or freeways, but often they are hit by cars and killed, or
come in contact with a hiker with deadly results.
Sikich believes this mountain
lion bedded down off of Second Street
because he was lost. He would have had
to cross major streets and intersections, and walk by people both sleeping and
awake to get to the center of town. The
Third Street Promenade, a major tourist and shopping center, was a block
away. When authorities tried to dart the
cat and the sedative didn’t work, they felt the public was in enough danger to
shoot and kill the animal. Still, as
many comments indicate on the Patch article, we will never know what might have
occurred had the cat been saved and transported elsewhere.
May be we need to re-evaluate
our compact with nature. Here in Los
Angeles , we live in such proximity to hills and
mountains. Urban growth mixes uneasily
with the natural world that once occupied the space, and neither humans or
animals are safe. No one likes to see
their beloved pets torn apart, and from the response this week, no Angelinos
are comfortable with law enforcement gunning down lions and bears in their
neighborhoods.
Police officers must have
non-lethal weaponry on hand in their vehicles to use against animals. As long as we continue to build into each
other’s habitats here in Los Angeles ,
we will face this problem, and therefore, both animals and humans will be in
jeopardy. The only solution is to be
better prepared for the next encounter.
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