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Cat tales

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A mountain lion/Wikimedia Commons

In the wake of an unconfirmed sighting of a mountain lion on the Anchorage Hillside, it is worth revisiting the history of cougar reports in and around Alaska’s largest city.

Wildlife biologists with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game say there is no evidence to indicate a mountain lion now on the prowl, an assessment which is wholly in keeping with the history of past reports. 

Until his retirement from Fish and Game in 2010, Rick Sinnott spent decades as the Anchorage area wildlife biologist, and in that time made an effort to chase down a variety of mountain lion reports.

“‘Investigate’ might be too strong a word,” he said in an email. “But if the sighting was recent and if I had time, I tried to check it out.”

Sinnott’s biggest discovery was that people have a strong tendency to see what they want to see. Human vision is distorted by what humans think.

As Science Daily observed, “Letting your imagination run away with you may actually influence how you see the world. New research from Vanderbilt University has found that mental imagery—what we see with the ‘mind’s eye’—directly impacts our visual perception.”

Or, as Joseph T. Hallinan put it at simply at Psychology Today, “we see what we want to see.”

Psychological studies of human, visual perception lead to the easy and unavoidable conclusion that it would be normal enough for someone who saw an oversize lynx in Anchorage to, on reflection, attach a long tail to that observation and report a mountain lion.

Which brings us back to Sinnott and his history of Anchorage mountain lion sightings.

Here kitty, kitty

He detailed those experiences in an email. The best example of someone seeing what they want to see might by this one:

“Another time a woman called and told me she lived in East Anchorage and had just seen a mountain lion out her window,” Sinnott wrote. “I started to ask her about the size, color and tail and she cut me off. ‘I’m from Montana. I know what a mountain lion looks like!’

“Extremely skeptical, I still went because it was only 15 minutes away, and she had just seen it. She waved me inside and led me to a bedroom at the back of the house. She told me she had seen it again after she called. It was less than 100 feet away, walking back and forth on the treeline. She left the room and I watched for a minute or two.

“Then I saw a large cat walking on the berm she had pointed to. She came back in and told me that was the lion. I said, ‘No, that’s a cat,’ and left.”

Sinnott had other similar experiences.

No, no, no

Here are his recollection of the best non-lion mountain lion sightings:

Sinnott remembered getting about a call per year, or maybe a little less, reporting a mountain lion sighting. None of the reports ever checked out.

“If a mountain lion had been in Anchorage,” he added, “the phone lines would have lit up” as they do when bears emerge from their dens in the spring. Fish and Game and the Anchorage Police Department annually gets swamped with bear calls.

The APD was getting so many calls this year it actually issued a media release saying that “there is no need to call if the animal is passing through the area, walking on the side of the road or exhibiting other natural behaviors.”

There has been no rash of mountain lion calls, and there has yet to surface a photo of the elusive cat in an age when many, if not most, Anchorage adults carry around a smart phone with a built-in camera.

Some of them might be reading this story on such a device now.

If you are, and if you happen to see a giant, brown lynx with a long tail snap a picture. Lynx are native to the Anchorage area, and they are now plentiful because the snowshoe hare cycle is near a peak.

Mountain lions are not native to the Anchorage area, but a photo could confirm they are here as unlikely as that now seems.

 

 

 

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