Cougar skulls, skin, and DNA: A history of the big cat in New Brunswick - Action News
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New Brunswick

Cougar skulls, skin, and DNA: A history of the big cat in New Brunswick

Despite genetic test results disproving a pair of reported cougar sightings, there's evidence to suggest the species has made intermittent appearances in New Brunswick over the last century.

Scientists searching for cougars in New Brunswick, but over the past century there's been evidence of several

Despite precious little proof of the species in New Brunswick there have been some interesting pieces of evidence of the big cat in the province dating back nearly 100 years. (Kirk Pennell/CBC)

Recent genetic test resultshave conclusively proven that two encounters in recent years with big cats in New Brunswick didn't involve cougars but there's evidence to suggest the species has madeintermittent appearances in the province over the last century.

Donald McAlpine, research curator and head of zoology at the New Brunswick museum, said there's never been a resident population of the big cats in the province, but various pieces of evidence of its presence have been found dating back to the early 1900s.

"We do have a photograph from 1932 from KentCountyof somebody holding up what is clearly a cougar skin," said McAlpine. "Whether it come from New Brunswick, we don't know."

McAlpine said the museum also has a mounted animal that came from the border region of New Brunswick, Maine and Quebec in 1938.

He said the assumption has always been that it was a wild animal, but the possibility exists that it could once have been captive.

Little is also known about a skull that was found in the woods not far from Fredericton in the early 1980s.

"The skull was picked up around a bear-baiting station. It may be fromthe carcass of an animal that was left in the woods," said McAlpine. "We've tried to extract DNA from that animal a number of times without success."

In addition to physical evidence, McAlpine said the museum has received "hundreds, if not thousands" of reports of cougar sightingsthat it hasn't been able to confirm.

"That's not to suggest that none of them are cougar," he said. "A very small percentage of them may be, and some of them do seem quite credible."

The most recentphysicalproof of the big cat in the province dates back to 2003. Hair samples were collected from scratchingpostsinstalled inFundyNational Park and tested for DNA, with two coming backpositive for cougar.

Geneticcomparisonof the samples to other cougarpopulationsfrom around the WesternHemisphere proved to befrom a South Americanpopulation. It isspeculatedthatanimal had been incaptivity before being released in the park. The other sample came from a Western Canadianpopulation.

New Brunswick is home to a pair of big cat species. Bobcat and lynx are elusive predators,rarelyseen, butwelldocumented in the province. They are often mistaken for cougars in the brief seconds they are spotted in New Brunswick forests.

Two instances of alleged cougar sightings were discounted this week when genetic testing on recovered hair and scat showed both animals had been bobcats.

Four more DNA samples are currently undergoing genetic testing at theCanadianRivers Institute Genomics Lab in Saint John.