This marks just the second time in our 24-year study that a bobcat, in this case B-372, has been determined to have died directly from the effects of these poisons: anticoagulant rat poisons (or anticoagulant rodenticides, also known as ARs).
Bobcat - Image from National Park Service
Note from The Fur-Bearers: This is a press release sent to our media department by the National Park Service in the United States. We decided to run it as-is to ensure the accuracy of the information.
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.— An adult female bobcat and a subadult male
mountain lion have both died directly from the effects of
anticoagulant rat poisons (or anticoagulant rodenticides, also known
as ARs), in the Simi Hills and Santa Susana Mountains north of the
Santa Monica Mountains this year, according to National Park Service
biologists.
This marks just the second time in our 24-year study that a bobcat,
in this case B-372, has been determined to have died directly from
the effects of these poisons, and the first time in 23 years. P-76,
a subadult male captured in Northridge late last year and jointly
studied by NPS and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife
(CDFW), died of anticoagulant toxicosis in the Santa Susana
Mountains.
“We basically never see this in bobcats, so this is an important
finding,” said Joanne Moriarty, a biologist who has worked on bobcat
research for more than 15 years. According to Moriarty, an
examination performed during her capture in January determined that
she was in good health, and that she had given birth in the past.
A necropsy report documented brodifacoum, bromadiolone, and
diphacinone in the bobcat’s tested liver sample. These compounds
include first- and second-generation poisons. Her body was
discovered on June 20 under an oak tree in a residential
neighborhood of Agoura Hills. She had been captured six months
earlier, on January 28, at the south end of Cheeseboro Canyon north
of the 101 Freeway.
Although more than 90% of bobcats in our study tested after death
have been positive for exposure to one or more AR compounds, we do
not generally see internal bleeding in bobcats, which is what leads
to death directly from AR exposure. Since 2002, the leading cause of
death for bobcats in this long-term study has been disease,
specifically notoedric mange, followed by road mortality, according
to Moriarty. NPS biologists, in collaboration with researchers at
UCLA, have found a strong association between the amount of exposure
to ARs and fatal mange disease, as well as significant effects of AR
exposure on immune function and even gene expression in bobcats.
Researchers have seen coagulopathy (uncontrolled bleeding) leading
to death in coyotes, foxes, and mountain lions in the study area,
but typically not bobcats.
Generally when biologists have documented coagulopathy due to AR
exposure in other species, the animals have appeared otherwise
healthy, indicating a potentially large one-time, or short-term,
exposure to the ARs sufficient to cause lethal coagulopathy. This
was the case for P-76, who appeared to be generally in good health.
In B-372’s case, however, she was extremely emaciated, and a bone
marrow test showed signs of chronic anemia, indicating that she may
have been experiencing clinical symptoms of coagulopathy over an
extended period, which in turn could indicate repeated exposure to
AR compounds.
What is also notable about this bobcat is that she spent much of her
time in residential areas, according to Moriarty, which is not
typical for adult females. The natural habitat in nearby park areas
was devastated by the November 2018 Woolsey Fire, and we documented
several other collared bobcats abandoning burned areas in the Simi
Hills shortly after the fire. Spending more time in neighborhoods
may have led to increased exposure to the poisons often used by
homeowners or businesses to control rodents. More exposure,
potentially over a shorter time period, could have led to more
severe direct impacts of the toxicants than we normally see in this
species.
P-76 is the sixth collared mountain lion to die of coagulopathy and
the third in the last two years. He was captured and collared by
California Department of Fish & Wildlife officers in November 2019
in an urban neighborhood in Northridge, just outside of Los Angeles.
“These two cases show us that different non-target species are
continuing to be exposed to these toxicants, including an array of
different poisons, with effects up to and including death from
uncontrolled bleeding,” said Dr. Seth Riley, the wildlife branch
chief and a UCLA adjunct associate professor. “We are also
continuing to see lots of cases of severe mange disease in bobcats
in the area. Between poisons, disease, and the massive Woolsey Fire,
it has been a tough go recently for our wild cats in the park.”
In the case of P-76, his collar went on “mortality mode” the night
of January 29, 2020. His carcass was recovered the following morning
by NPS and CDFW biologists in the Santa Susana Mountains, north of
Highway 118. His body was submitted to the California Animal Health
and Food Safety (CAHFS) Lab in San Bernardino for a necropsy and
testing, as with B-372. The results, which came back only recently,
showed exposure to five compounds (brodifacoum, bromadiolone,
chlorophacinone, difethialone, and diphacinone), which include
first- and second-generation poisons.
NPS researchers have documented the presence of anticoagulant
rodenticide compounds in 26 out of 27 local mountain lions that they
have tested, including in a three-month-old kitten.
Since 1996, the NPS has been studying carnivores, including bobcats
and since 2002 mountain lions, in and around the Santa Monica
Mountains to determine how they survive in a fragmented and
urbanized environment.
The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is responsible for
overseeing the management and conservation of wildlife in the state,
including both bobcats and mountain lions.
Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area (SMMNRA) is the
largest urban national park in the country, encompassing more than
150,000 acres of mountains and coastline in Ventura and Los Angeles
counties. A unit of the National Park Service, it comprises a
seamless network of local, state, and federal parks interwoven with
private lands and communities. As one of only five Mediterranean
ecosystems in the world, SMMNRA preserves the rich biological
diversity of more than 450 animal species and 26 distinct plant
communities. For more information, visit nps.gov/samo.