Cougar family

Waterton Lakes National Park

Cougar Track Cougar track

Cougars are common but elusive residents of Waterton Lakes National Park. Mostly we see their tracks, because they usually hunt and travel at night, or at dawn/dusk. Their common prey animals are mule and white-tailed deer.

They occasionally kill an elk, moose or bighorn sheep, but these animals are generally too large to capture. Being a large, heavy cat they have difficulty moving in deep snow. The main Waterton valley, where there is less snowfall and more wind to blow it away (which also makes it easier for deer and elk to feed) are their most frequent hunting grounds.

This cougar family is hunting throughout the valley, being "captured" on a number of our remote wildlife cameras. Young kittens are usually left at a safe site while the mother goes hunting, but these kittens are probably at least six months old and are now accompanying their mother and learning to hunt.

Cougar
Cougar

Cat chit chat!

Most people assume that when cats scratch objects with their front paws, they are sharpening their claws. It turns out that this is only a secondary reason. Research suggests that the major reason for this behaviour is communication.

Cats have scent glands in their paws so that when they make a scratch they leave odour cues that other cats can smell. By roughing up the bark of a tree or other objects, cats are letting other cats know where they are.

Cats tend to pick a few conspicuous objects in their environments to scratch, such as trees, logs, etc., and return to them repeatedly. This log seems to be a particular favourite of this cougar where the cameras have captured her several times.

Cats also use scent from other parts of their bodies to communicate. They have scent glands at the corners of their mouths, in the thin hair between their eyes and ears and at the base of their tails. They leave scent marks when they rub their heads and tails on things. Just what they are communicating with this rubbing isn’t known.

A remote camera in Waterton Lakes National Park captures a cougar scratching a log
A cougar scratching
A remote camera in Waterton Lakes National Park captures a cougar scratching a log
This log seems to be a particular favourite of this cougar

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