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3-month-old endangered panther kittens killed by vehicle in Florida
3-month-old endangered panther kittens killed by vehicle in Florida

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • CBS News

3-month-old endangered panther kittens killed by vehicle in Florida

Remains of two female panther kittens were found Sunday on a road in South Florida, bringing the statewide death toll for the endangered species this year to 12, state wildlife officials said. The incident happened in South Florida's Collier County, near Naples, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Each kitten was 3 1/2 months old. Lisa Thompson, a commission spokesperson, referred to the panthers as siblings in an email to CBS News on Wednesday and said officials suspect that both were killed in a vehicle collision. Incidents involving cars are usually the cause of panther deaths in Florida, the wildlife commission's records shows. Of the deaths that appear in the 2025 log, all but one are attributed to vehicle strikes. The cause of death for the one not killed in a vehicle strike is listed as "Intraspecific Aggression." Florida panthers are the only mountain lion subspecies that currently exists in the eastern United States, according to the National Wildlife Federation. As the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service notes, the animal initially appeared on the federal government's list of endangered species in 1967, when hunting had nearly eradicated the population. Florida's wildlife commission says between 120 and 230 adult panthers now exist in southern parts of Florida, after decades with protected status that makes it illegal to hunt or kill them. "The FWC encourages motorists to slow down and observe all posted speed limits, especially in panther zones, which are in place in several counties across South Florida and coincide with areas where panthers are known to cross," Thompson said. "These panther speed zones help ensure the survival of the endangered Florida panther and protect motorists from personal injury." Wildlife officials have asked Florida residents to contact the commission's alert hotline if they come across a panther that is dead, injured or ill, as they try to safeguard the species. Panther deaths overall are down this year in Florida. The state's 2024 total reached 36 by the end of December, according to the wildlife commission. However, the commission had recorded just 16 of those deaths by this time last August. The commission attributed 30 of that year's deaths to vehicles, and at least one of them involved a train accident. The 2024 death toll was Florida's highest since 2018, officials Breen contributed to this report.

Big cat expert reveals truth behind viral ‘panther' footage
Big cat expert reveals truth behind viral ‘panther' footage

News.com.au

time20-07-2025

  • General
  • News.com.au

Big cat expert reveals truth behind viral ‘panther' footage

An Australian big cat expert has revealed the truth after a clip of a supposed 'panther' went viral on social media early last week. The footage, which has amassed over 2.5 million views, shows a large, jet black cat prowling along a road in Victoria's bushland. Viewers were quick to brand it 'irrefutable proof' of the folklore that has long gripped the nation. However, former Australian Zoo big cat keeper and expert Vaughan King has now revealed the truth behind the hugely popular video. 'It's almost certainly just a healthy looking black feral cat with its winter coat,' Mr King told For years, people have believed that Australia's vast, untamed bushland could be hiding more than just kangaroos and kookaburras. In late April 2024, prospector Angus James filmed what appears to be a large, jetâ€'black feline near Ballarat, Victoria. At the time, he told that he spotted the jet black shaped animal in his paddock when he was driving past. 'I pulled up and went to zoom in on it with my camera. And then it sort of took off and just sort of panned with it.' 'It was obviously a big cat – massive – bigger than your average house cat, that's for sure,' he said. There are numerous sophisticated online databases that track 'big cat' sightings across Australia. Perhaps the most common descriptions include large, black or tan-coloured cats resembling panthers or pumas. And big cat origin theories are almost as plentiful as the sightings themselves. Some theories suggest that the so-called big cats are escapees from private zoos, circuses, or exotic pet owners. Historian David Waldron of Federation University's Ballarat campus left the door slightly ajar for the possibility of big cats roaming the nation. 'If you actually think about it, it's not particularly absurd — adding another introduced species to the pile,' he told ABC RN in 2018. Dr Waldron canvassed government and media archives to uncover evidence of the early exotic animal trade in Australia, including instances of escaped circus animals. 'I came across one case in NSW where disgruntled performers let three tigers lose when they quit,' he said. Another well-known theory is that today's cats might be descendants of abandoned mascots from World War II American soldiers. 'There definitely have been individual big cats in the bush out there from time to time, even quite recently. That's documented. 'Particularly in the 19th century where you didn't have quarantine regulations, like we have today.' Indeed, reports of big cats span back to the 1800s, with a more recent, 2001 Deakin University study concluding that evidence of big cats in the Grampians was 'beyond reasonable doubt.' In Vaughan King's documentary ' The Hunt: In Search of Australia's Big Cats ', the big cat expert teamed up with veteran researchers John Turner and Simon Townsend to investigate the sightings that have gripped Australians. The film investigated multiple reports across the Otways in Victoria, the Hunter Valley in New South Wales and southâ€'west Western Australia. Mr King — who moved his family to Victoria to lead the project — used longâ€'range camera traps, thermal drones, DNA sampling and intensive field investigations. The team received hundreds of reports of sightings in the lead up to filming, some of which ranged from strange growls in the night and barbarous livestock killings. In Victoria's Yarra and Dandenong Ranges, Mr King declared a big cat could '100 per cent' survive — despite the absence of sightings during filming. Over in NSW in the Blue Mountains region, there have been over 560 reports of big cat sightings in the Hawkesbury, Blue Mountains and Lithgow area since 1998. In response, the Department of Primary Industries commissioned four inquiries during the years 1999, 2003, 2008 and 2013. In a 1999 letter to then National Parks and Wildlife Service director-general Brian Gilligan, Department of Agriculture head Kevin Sheridan warned: ''The reports are becoming too frequent for us to ignore the possibility. To … do so could bring into question government's duty of care.'' Wildlife ecologist Johannes Bauer was later commissioned to provide expert opinion. 'Difficult as it seems to accept, the most likely explanation of the evidence is the presence of a large, feline predator,'' he said. 'In this area, [it is] most likely a leopard, less likely a jaguar.'' In 2008, the report concluded: 'There is no scientific evidence found during this review that conclusively proves the presence of free-ranging exotic large cats in NSW, but a presence cannot be discounted, and it seems more likely than not on available evidence that such animals do exist in NSW.' However, the 2013 inquiry returned bad news for lovers of the lore with invasive species expert John Parkes labelling the 500 eyewitness accounts as 'at best prima facie evidence'', saying 'large dogs, large feral cats or swamp wallabies'' were the likely candidates. But eyewitnesses continue to disagree. In 2020, professional photographer Amber Noseda captured a series of photos of a large, sleek black cat sauntering into the bush in southwest Victoria in 2020. That same year, TV host Grant Denyer revealed he had seen what he believes to be 'sheep-sized' panthers on his Bathurst property. 'I'll give you an exclusive, and don't think I'm crazy, but I am on the panther bandwagon right now,' Denyer told at the time. 'I'm talking about the famous panthers that roam the Australian bush,' he said. 'I've seen the panther twice on the bottom of my farm and I have video to prove it — although blurry and zoomed 10 times on my iPhone,' he said. Whether stories of panthers quietly stalking the Australian bush are true or not remains unknown, but witnesses and investigators are not giving up anytime soon.

Shape of meow! Big cat sighting near Ed Sheeran's £3.7million country estate sparks loose 'panther' fears
Shape of meow! Big cat sighting near Ed Sheeran's £3.7million country estate sparks loose 'panther' fears

Daily Mail​

time09-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Shape of meow! Big cat sighting near Ed Sheeran's £3.7million country estate sparks loose 'panther' fears

A large panther-like animal has been spotted near Ed Sheeran 's £3.7million country estate, prompting fears a big cat is on the loose. A neighbour in Eye, Suffolk was left terrified when he saw the feline just five miles from the Shape Of You singer's swish home, but still found time to take a few snaps. They show a bulky black creature lurking by the trees on April 23 before disappearing from view. Matt Salusbury, who runs the Big Cats of Suffolk website said: 'The witness told me they'd seen a large black animal walking up and down along the tree line at the end of a field behind their garden. 'The distance from where they were to the animal when they photographed it was a good few minutes walk. 'They observed it for more than five minutes before it sat down with its head up.' The Perfect hitmaker, 34, lives in the large Framlingham property with his wife Cherry Seaborn and their two daughters. There have been many reports of big cats in Britain over the years, with most claiming to have spotted panthers or pumas. Locals have often been able to take a quick photo of the creature or a suspicious animal carcass they might have preyed on. Those who support the theory that such cats are roaming around the country tend to claim they are pets which have escaped. Others, however, think species have been illegally released into the wild. Sceptics reckon that sightings involve people mistaking them for large domestic dogs or cats, and that such animals could not survive in the UK's mild climate. Among the most famous alleged big cats in the country was the Beast of Exmoor in Devon in the 80s, which a farmer in the area claimed killed 100 of his sheep in three months. People regularly report puma spottings in Shropshire while Suffolk also remains a hotspot. As well as the recent sighting near the pop star's home, there was one in Hoxne in 2006, another near Eye in 2008, and one at Mendlesham in 2015. MailOnline has contacted Mr Sheeran's representatives for comment. There are fears that a large creature may be on the loose after the footage was captured on doorbell camera showing a huge black moggy on the driveway of a house It comes after a big cat which some suspect to be the notorious Beast of Bucks was spotted prowling in the dead of night. There are fears that a large creature may be on the loose after the footage was captured on doorbell camera showing a huge black moggy on the driveway of a house. The dark coloured cat appeared much bigger than a domestic feline as it balanced atop a skip. The sighting has added yet more fuel to the fire of a local myth in Buckinghamshire. Homeowner David Lawrence lives in a village near High Wycombe, where tales of a puma-sized Beast of Bucks are legendary, and said he saw a large cat which wasn't 'normal'.

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