Mountain lion caught in California residential area

It is estimated that the felines number between 4,000 and 6,000 in the US state.

November 11, 2017 11:50 am | Updated 11:52 am IST - SAN FRANCISCO:

Officials tie the legs of a mountain lion in San Francisco after it was tranquillised on November 10, 2017. The feline, which was cornered by a game warden near a playground and shot with a tranquilizer gun, has been since fitted with a GPS collar and is ready to go back into the wild.

Officials tie the legs of a mountain lion in San Francisco after it was tranquillised on November 10, 2017. The feline, which was cornered by a game warden near a playground and shot with a tranquilizer gun, has been since fitted with a GPS collar and is ready to go back into the wild.

A mountain lion that was reported roaming around an urban residential area in California was caught alive behind a housing complex near San Francisco, authorities said.

A TV footage showed that the lion was carried away on Friday on a pickup truck after it was shot with tranquilisers with its four paws cuffed and a black bag covering its head, reports Xinhua news agency.

It was crouching in the trees

The big cat was spotted slinking around an area of the Diamond Heights village of San Francisco, crouching in the trees behind the homes, before it was cornered by a game warden who shot the animal with a tranquilizer gun.

Local media quoted a police officer at the scene as saying that its was a full grown female mountain lion.

“We’re all kind of baffled,” said Justin Dellinger, a senior environmental scientist. “I think we’re all a little stumped about how it even got there.”

Wildlife experts believe the big cat either found its way to San Francisco from wildland areas on the San Francisco Peninsula or sauntered over the Golden Gate Bridge at night.

It is estimated that between 4,000 and 6,000 mountain lions are currently in California, and their territory can extend from 16 to 640 sq.km, according to wildlife officials.

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