DWR Press Release
Cougars are doing well in Utah. So well, in fact, that a few more hunters might be allowed to hunt them this fall.
This past season, hunters were given the opportunity to take 531 cougars in the state. For the upcoming season, biologists with the Division of Wildlife Resources are recommending that hunters be allowed to take 565.
(Every hunter won’t take a cougar, so the number of cougars taken would actually be lower than 565. For example, allowing hunters to take 531 cougars last season resulted in 400 cougars being taken.)
Bobcat recommendations, for Utah’s upcoming season, will also be discussed at an upcoming series of public meetings.
Learn more, share your ideas
All of the biologists’ cougar and bobcat hunting recommendations are available at www.wildlife.utah.gov/public_meetings. After you’ve reviewed the ideas, you can let your Regional Advisory Council members know your thoughts by attending your upcoming RAC meeting or by sending an email to them.
RAC chairmen will share the input they receive with members of the Utah Wildlife Board. The board will meet in Salt Lake City on Aug. 31 to approve cougar and bobcat hunting recommendations for Utah’s 2017 – 2018 seasons.
Dates, times and locations for the RAC meetings are as follows:
Central Region
July 25
6:30 p.m.
Springville Civic Center
110 S. Main St.
Springville
Northern Region
July 26
6 p.m.
Brigham City Community Center
24 N. 300 W.
Brigham City
Southern Region
Aug. 1
7 p.m.
Beaver High School
195 E. Center St.
Beaver
Southeastern Region
Aug. 2
6:30 p.m.
John Wesley Powell Museum
1765 E. Main St.
Green River
Northeastern Region
Aug. 3
6:30 p.m.
DWR Northeastern Region Office
318 N. Vernal Ave.
Vernal
You can also provide your comments to your RAC via email. Email addresses for your RAC members are available at www.wildlife.utah.gov/dwr/rac-members.html.
The group each RAC member represents (sportsman, non-consumptive, etc.) is listed under each person’s email address. You should direct your email to the people on the RAC who represent your interest.
Cougar population
In addition to helping protect deer, bighorn sheep and livestock in Utah, hunters who take cougars help biologists manage the state’s cougar population. They do that by providing the biologists with valuable information.
Darren DeBloois, game mammals coordinator for the DWR, says those who take a cougar must bring the animal to a DWR biologist or a conservation officer. “The first thing we do is examine the animal to see if it’s a male or a female,” he says. “Next, we determine the animal’s age by removing and analyzing one of its teeth.”
DeBloois says the number of females and the number of adults in a cougar population are the key factors in keeping the population healthy and strong.
“A male cougar will breed with several females,” he says, “so keeping plenty of females in the population is important. The number of adults is also important. A healthy population will have plenty of adults in it. If the number of adults starts to decline, we know the overall number of cougars in the population is declining too.”
Utah’s Cougar Management Plan provides guidelines that help ensure the state has a healthy and stable cougar population. The two major guidelines are the number of female cougars hunters take—compared to the number of males—and the number of cougars taken that are five years of age or older.
The plan says not more than 40 percent of the cougars hunters take can be females. And at least 15 percent of the cougars taken must be five years of age or older.
During the 2016 – 2017 season, only 28 percent of the cougars taken were females. And 23 percent of the cougars taken were five years of age or older.
“Utah’s cougar population has plenty of females in it,” DeBloois says, “and plenty of adults too. For those reasons, we’re recommending a slight permit increase for the 2017 – 2018 season.”
If you have questions about the upcoming meetings, call the nearest DWR office or the DWR’s Salt Lake City office at 801-538-4700.