Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population

ABSTRACT Natal dens and neonatal behavior are a critical but understudied component of reproductive success in cryptic solitary carnivores. Mountain lion (Puma concolor) nursery sites tend to be in remote and difficult‐to‐observe areas—as a result, there are few in‐depth behavioral observations of n...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maximilian L. Allen, Colin Croft, Shannon P. Finnegan, Bethany H. Warner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71687
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1839610765359710208
author Maximilian L. Allen
Colin Croft
Shannon P. Finnegan
Bethany H. Warner
author_facet Maximilian L. Allen
Colin Croft
Shannon P. Finnegan
Bethany H. Warner
author_sort Maximilian L. Allen
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Natal dens and neonatal behavior are a critical but understudied component of reproductive success in cryptic solitary carnivores. Mountain lion (Puma concolor) nursery sites tend to be in remote and difficult‐to‐observe areas—as a result, there are few in‐depth behavioral observations of neonatal mountain lions. In this study, we present detailed opportunistic observations from a week of continuous monitoring of a mountain lion nursery located in the Gilbert‐Baker Wildlife Management Area in northwestern Nebraska. Using a non‐invasive video camera trap, we recorded 403 videos comprising 76 distinct bouts of activity. We confirmed the presence of four kittens during the first day of monitoring; however, subsequent recordings consistently captured three or fewer individuals—with most videos featuring one (50.7%) or two (34.8%) kittens. This variation demonstrates the inherent limitations of camera traps to reliably detect all individuals, potentially biasing abundance estimates that rely on repeated count data. Play (chasing, pouncing, wrestling, and tree climbing) and vocalizations (high‐pitched contact calls by kittens and low growling purrs from the mother) were the most frequent behaviors we observed. We also documented allogrooming and autogrooming, as well as the mother carrying kittens in her mouth. Although no nursing or feeding was directly observed, prey remains found near the nursery on a subsequent visit confirmed maternal foraging and provisioning. Activity patterns were crepuscular overall but differed by mountain lion class and temporal resolution. Specifically, these patterns varied depending on whether we analyzed times from individual videos or the beginning of activity bouts, underscoring the importance of the data resolution used when analyzing camera trap data. Our findings demonstrate the value of camera traps for studying neonatal carnivore behavior and highlight the need for suitable nursery habitats as mountain lions recolonize portions of their former range.
format Article
id doaj-art-8632daa2bc8c40ac846d10cddc8f7235
institution Matheson Library
issn 2045-7758
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecology and Evolution
spelling doaj-art-8632daa2bc8c40ac846d10cddc8f72352025-07-29T05:23:10ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-07-01157n/an/a10.1002/ece3.71687Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains PopulationMaximilian L. Allen0Colin Croft1Shannon P. Finnegan2Bethany H. Warner3Illinois Natural History Survey Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois Champaign Illinois USAWestern Nebraska Community College Scottsbluff Nebraska USAResearch Department Leopard Ecology and Conservation Gaborone BotswanaIllinois Natural History Survey Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois Champaign Illinois USAABSTRACT Natal dens and neonatal behavior are a critical but understudied component of reproductive success in cryptic solitary carnivores. Mountain lion (Puma concolor) nursery sites tend to be in remote and difficult‐to‐observe areas—as a result, there are few in‐depth behavioral observations of neonatal mountain lions. In this study, we present detailed opportunistic observations from a week of continuous monitoring of a mountain lion nursery located in the Gilbert‐Baker Wildlife Management Area in northwestern Nebraska. Using a non‐invasive video camera trap, we recorded 403 videos comprising 76 distinct bouts of activity. We confirmed the presence of four kittens during the first day of monitoring; however, subsequent recordings consistently captured three or fewer individuals—with most videos featuring one (50.7%) or two (34.8%) kittens. This variation demonstrates the inherent limitations of camera traps to reliably detect all individuals, potentially biasing abundance estimates that rely on repeated count data. Play (chasing, pouncing, wrestling, and tree climbing) and vocalizations (high‐pitched contact calls by kittens and low growling purrs from the mother) were the most frequent behaviors we observed. We also documented allogrooming and autogrooming, as well as the mother carrying kittens in her mouth. Although no nursing or feeding was directly observed, prey remains found near the nursery on a subsequent visit confirmed maternal foraging and provisioning. Activity patterns were crepuscular overall but differed by mountain lion class and temporal resolution. Specifically, these patterns varied depending on whether we analyzed times from individual videos or the beginning of activity bouts, underscoring the importance of the data resolution used when analyzing camera trap data. Our findings demonstrate the value of camera traps for studying neonatal carnivore behavior and highlight the need for suitable nursery habitats as mountain lions recolonize portions of their former range.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71687camera trapdendetectionnurseryPuma concolorvocalization
spellingShingle Maximilian L. Allen
Colin Croft
Shannon P. Finnegan
Bethany H. Warner
Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
Ecology and Evolution
camera trap
den
detection
nursery
Puma concolor
vocalization
title Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
title_full Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
title_fullStr Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
title_full_unstemmed Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
title_short Behavioral Observations From a Mountain Lion Nursery in a Recolonizing Great Plains Population
title_sort behavioral observations from a mountain lion nursery in a recolonizing great plains population
topic camera trap
den
detection
nursery
Puma concolor
vocalization
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71687
work_keys_str_mv AT maximilianlallen behavioralobservationsfromamountainlionnurseryinarecolonizinggreatplainspopulation
AT colincroft behavioralobservationsfromamountainlionnurseryinarecolonizinggreatplainspopulation
AT shannonpfinnegan behavioralobservationsfromamountainlionnurseryinarecolonizinggreatplainspopulation
AT bethanyhwarner behavioralobservationsfromamountainlionnurseryinarecolonizinggreatplainspopulation