Description & Signs

Description

The mountain lion (Puma concolor) is a large, slender cat with a small head, small rounded ears that are not tufted, powerful shoulders and hindquarters, and a cylindrical tail that is long and heavy. The body fur is short and soft and can range in color from tawny orange to buff brown to gray. Adult mountain lions have a total body length of 60 to 102 inches and stand 26 to 30 inches tall at the shoulder. Their tails average between 21 to 35 inches long—often about half their body length—and are carried low to the ground. An adult male weighs 140 to 160 pounds but can reach weights over 200 pounds. Adult females average between 90 and 130 pounds.

Mountain lion kittens are born buff, spotted with black, and with dark rings on their tails and legs. Spots fade to light brown by 9 months of age and completely disappear by 18 months of age. Tail rings usually disappear by 9 months. Leg bars remain until about 2.5 years of age. Each of these markings can provide clues to a mountain lion’s age.

Mountain lion and bobcat comparison
The mountain lion has a long tail, while the bobcat has a short tail.

Tracks

Mountain Lion Tracks

Mountain lion paw characteristics

Dog Tracks

Dog paw characteristics

Illustrations of mountain lion and dog tracks
Comparison of mountain lion and dog tracks

Expert trackers look for the following to identify mountain lion tracks:

Kill Evidence

Mountain lions—They generally kill their prey quickly and efficiently. They creep close, then rush quickly to hit the animal and bite it either in the back of the neck to sever the spinal column, the throat to crush the trachea, or the skull to puncture the brain. They do not have long endurance, and do not make long chases.

Mountain lions use their claws primarily as hooks to hold onto their prey until they can administer a lethal bite. They seldom leave deep slashes.

After the prey is dead, they generally drag the carcass to dense cover to feed. They often open the abdominal cavity, roll out the stomach and intestines and begin feeding on the other soft internal organs. On other occasions they begin to feed at the shoulders and ribs.

After they’ve eaten their fill, mountain lions generally cover the remainder of the carcass with grass, leaves, dirt and other debris. They return to the kill for subsequent feedings as long as it lasts, or until they make another kill.

Bobcats—Since Missouri has an increasing bobcat population--and because bobcats employ many of the same techniques to kill and eat their prey—distinguishing the two often depends on finding and measuring tracks and/or punctures made by their canines. A mountain lion’s canines are 2 to 2.5 inches apart; dogs are less than 2 inches; coyotes are 1.5 inches; and bobcats are about 1 inch apart.

Dogs—Dogs frequently attack and kill wildlife and livestock. They usually chase their prey and attack wherever they can get a hold on the animal, most often the hindquarters, tails, ears and nose. Bite marks from dogs raking down the shoulders, sides and flanks of livestock are often mistaken for "claw marks." Their attacks usually lead to indiscriminate mutilation and they feed very little on their prey. Dogs generally do not kill the prey quickly or efficiently, but pursue and bite it repeatedly, causing other injuries from collisions with gates, fences and other objects.

Sounds

Mountain lions make little noise in the woods. When they do, they often sound like a person whistling or a bird chirping. When they growl, they sound like an overgrown house cat. Kittens have a raspy, loud purr. Many people hear shrieks in the night and think they are made by mountain lions, but almost always these blood-curdling screams are made by other animals. To hear some of these spooky nighttime calls, check out these links: