gersdorf
Life Member
Here is an article from todays paper about a mountain lion killing a deer in marshall county. Here is pic from a trail camera that I got from a employee of the Marshall County Conservation office.
Mountain lion back in Iowa, DNR says
A Marshall County deer kill is the first sign of the big cat in 1 1/2 years.
By NIGEL DUARA
REGISTER STAFF WRITER
June 1, 2006
Biologists at the Iowa Department of Natural Resources confirmed that a mountain lion killed a deer in Marshall County.
A landowner found the deer Tuesday morning on private property about two miles northwest of Bangor, said Rick Trine, wildlife management biologist for the area.
Trine said the marks on the deer and the condition it was found in are consistent with a large-cat kill.
"The claw marks on the hind quarters and neck, puncture wounds to the neck and head, and the fact the 150-plus-pound deer was dragged 50 yards to some pine trees indicates to us it was a mountain lion kill," Trine said.
The deer only had three legs. "It was an old injury that apparently had healed, but left it easy prey," Trine said.
This is the first confirmed mountain lion in Iowa since October 2004. That lion was found about three miles from the Marshall County find, but Trine said that doesn't mean it's the same animal.
"They can travel pretty far in a single night," Trine said.
Some want to hunt the big cat, which once was native to Iowa. Others want to protect it.
Ron Andrews, a DNR fur-bearer biologist, said mountain lions are unprotected in Iowa and can be killed by legal means. However, he advised that people who see a mountain lion avoid it, and that they call their county DNR officer.
"If you see one, act big, act tough, look mean," he said. "The worst thing you can do is take off running."

Mountain lion back in Iowa, DNR says
A Marshall County deer kill is the first sign of the big cat in 1 1/2 years.
By NIGEL DUARA
REGISTER STAFF WRITER
June 1, 2006
Biologists at the Iowa Department of Natural Resources confirmed that a mountain lion killed a deer in Marshall County.
A landowner found the deer Tuesday morning on private property about two miles northwest of Bangor, said Rick Trine, wildlife management biologist for the area.
Trine said the marks on the deer and the condition it was found in are consistent with a large-cat kill.
"The claw marks on the hind quarters and neck, puncture wounds to the neck and head, and the fact the 150-plus-pound deer was dragged 50 yards to some pine trees indicates to us it was a mountain lion kill," Trine said.
The deer only had three legs. "It was an old injury that apparently had healed, but left it easy prey," Trine said.
This is the first confirmed mountain lion in Iowa since October 2004. That lion was found about three miles from the Marshall County find, but Trine said that doesn't mean it's the same animal.
"They can travel pretty far in a single night," Trine said.
Some want to hunt the big cat, which once was native to Iowa. Others want to protect it.
Ron Andrews, a DNR fur-bearer biologist, said mountain lions are unprotected in Iowa and can be killed by legal means. However, he advised that people who see a mountain lion avoid it, and that they call their county DNR officer.
"If you see one, act big, act tough, look mean," he said. "The worst thing you can do is take off running."