• Please be sure to read the rules and adhere to them. Some banned members have complained that they are not spammers. But they spammed us. Some even tried to redirect our members to other forums. Duh. Be smart. Read the rules and adhere to them and we will all get along just fine. Cheers. :beer: Link to the rules: https://www.forumsforums.com/threads/forum-rules-info.2974/

Mountain Lions are migrating to the Great Planes states

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
Looks like the big cats are expanding their range, and moving eastward to establish permanent homes. Certainly there have been Mountain Lion/Cougar sightings in many states, but the random sighting of a stray is somewhat different than establishment of new colonies and expanding range. Kansas, Nebraska, both of the Dakotas are all seeing increases in the predator cats.

Cowboy State Daily covers stories like this better than any other source I can find: https://cowboystatedaily.com/2025/0...izzlies-here-come-the-prairie-mountain-lions/



Move Over, Prairie Grizzlies, Here Come The Prairie Mountain Lions

Mountain lions are associated with, well, mountains. But they are increasingly reclaiming habitat in Great Plains states such as Nebraska and Kansas. That follows patterns seen from other species, like grizzlies expanding back into prairie areas.
heinz_mark.png
Mark Heinz
August 10, 20254 min read
A mountain lion lurks in a tree in the Metcalf Wildlife Management Area in Sheridan County, Nebraska.
A mountain lion lurks in a tree in the Metcalf Wildlife Management Area in Sheridan County, Nebraska. (Courtesy Nebraskaland Magazine, Nebraska Game and Parks Commission)
Mountain lions have been expanding their range into the Great Plains states for more than 20 years, but that migration seems to be picking up steam. Increasing numbers of mountain lion sightings in Kansas and verified reports of kittens born in Oklahoma show that the big cats’ range isn’t limited by their name. Nebraska has a well-established mountain lion population with hunting seasons for the big cats.
Even so, don’t expect to see bunches of mountain lions wandering together on America’s open prairies like prides of lions on the Serengeti in Africa.
Regardless of habitat, mountain lions are still mostly solitary and like to ambush their prey from hiding spots. In the Great Plains states, they’re settling in places such as rugged, forested bluffs or river breaks with steep ravines and thick cover.
“Mountain lions are extremely adaptive and prairie habitat is usually more what we would consider dispersal habitat. They're usually associated with some sort of topography that assists them with their stalk-and-ambush predation strategy,” Wyoming Game and Fish Large Carnivore Specialist Dan Thompson told Cowboy State Daily.

Great Plains Getting Wilder

The mountain lions’ push into the prairie states is part of a larger movement of species that were driven back into the mountains as the West was settled. Now they are steadily reclaiming prairie areas across the Great Plains.
That includes grizzlies in Montana pushing as far east as the Missouri Breaks and elk with Wyoming DNA reestablishing herds in Nebraska.
At one time, there were mountain lions — also called cougars, panthers or catamounts — all over the country. “Mountain lions used to roam across the entire Lower 48, although we don't have an idea as to what relative densities were in some of those prairie habitats,” Thompson said.

Nebraska Has Three Main Populations

In Nebraska, mountain lions are plentiful in three places, said Kent Fricke, assistant division administrator with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
Those include the Pine Ridge region in the northern panhandle, the Wildcat Hills in the southern panhandle, and along the Niobrara River, which runs across the northern part of the state.
The first two areas are “ponderosa pine-dominated, with rugged buttes and bluffs, not what people typically think of when they think of Nebraska,” he told Cowboy State Daily. The Niobrara River country is “more typical, using air quotes here, ‘prairie habitat,’” he said.
Even so, mountain lions rarely stray more than a mile from riparian river zones and out into the prairie grasslands, Fricke added.
There’s evidence that mountain lions have been pushing eastward along the river, though it’s not known whether they’ve gotten as far as the confluence of the Niobrara and Missouri rivers. It’s “typically young males” that wander the farthest, Fricke said.
Though Nebraska shares a long state line with Kansas, it’s not likely that many of the mountain lions popping up in Kansas came from Nebraska, he said. Most of the country along the Nebraska-Kansas state line doesn’t have the river bottoms that mountain lions prefer to move through, he said. Instead, it’s more likely that the Kansas mountain lions came from Colorado.

Dinnertime On The Great Plains

Nebraska has plenty of prey animals for mountain lions to feast on, Fricke said.
In western Nebraska, there are the aforementioned elk, as well as mule deer, white-tailed deer and even some bighorn sheep, he said.
Farther to the east, the menu changes to white-tailed deer and an array of smaller animals.
Mountain lions are adaptable eaters, Thompson said.
“Their primary prey would likely be deer, but we also documented a higher prevalence of smaller prey items in agricultural habitats of the Dakotas — badgers, beavers, porcupines, etc,” he said. “They are very adaptable and adept as a species.”

The Big Cats Will Keep Moving

Mountain lions have been pushing out in all directions for years, Thompson said.
“We've documented mountain lions dispersing into the Midwest since at least the early 2000s,” he said.
“Nebraska was likely recolonized from the Black Hills and the Laramie Range more recently, based on genetic analyses. We have documented them dispersing west into Wyoming from Nebraska and vice versa,” Thompson added.
Once mountain lions get moving, they really like to rack up the miles.
“They have the ability to move great distances while dispersing, especially into these recolonization areas,” he said. “We documented dispersal from the Black Hills to Nebraska, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Canada. That was just from animals collared in the Black Hills.”
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.
 
We have a few in Iowa. Several have been taken while engaging with livestock. Many tracks have been seen in the area. Probably only one or two, but we all know they are out there.

I suspect the mountain lions are following the rivers as they expand east toward Iowa, probably coming south out of Minnesota too?

We occasionally hear of a stray sighting in northern Indiana, probably coming down from Michigan. The lower penninsula of Michigan typically reports sightings on an annual basis.

Like you said, probably a small population in Michigan, but we all know they are out there. And the occasional stray will wonder across the IN border.

Every few years we get a couple black bear sightings in my state too, but mostly they are in Michigan and one will wander down before going back north.
 
We have a few in Iowa. Several have been taken while engaging with livestock. Many tracks have been seen in the area. Probably only one or two, but we all know they are out there.
That's how it is in East Texas. There are very few sightings but plenty of evidence of their presence. There is no shortage of white tail deer for them to prey on. About 15 years ago we had one coming around the house. The dogs and I had a couple of close encounters and then it moved on. Haven't seen one since. Very occasionally I see a track down in the wet draw behind the dam but that's about all.
 
I caught a Cougar on my dash-cam last year... but you can't tell what it is from the video. It was pretty dark outside, my cam does great in daylight... notsomuch at night.

It was only about five miles from my house. (Antrim County, Michigan).
 
last year this was posted, we have bobcat's and fishers that run around the mountain fishers suck because the only predator is humans they were bought in to control porcupines is the rumor.
 
Fishers are actually native to all of northern North America's forested areas. They were mostly hunted/trapped to extinction for their pelts. Still have pockets of Fishers in many areas, but mostly in the larger forested areas, California/Oregon/Washington and then again some parts of New England (parts of upstate NY, Vermont, N.H. and Maine). They are far more widespread in Canada.

I don't believe they are in the area west of Pennsylvania all the way to Rocky Mountains, perhaps through the Rockies. Might have some in the northern areas of Minnesota? Wisconsin? Maybe in the Yooper of Michigan?
 
I have apprentices that apply for and receive trapping tags for fishers. they are in Wisconsin.

We have mountain lions as well.

The full time folks around the cabin make nothing of it. the weekenders have face book groups about them and rile up fear about protecting their pets.... and don't jog alone.

my opinion you did not ask for...... they want nothing to do with humans..
 
Top