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First photos of cougars killing donkeys in Death Valley suggest big impacts for ecosystem
https://www.science.org ^ | 2 AUG 2022 - 12:40 PM | KATHERINE IRVING

Posted on 08/05/2022 12:20:52 PM PDT by Red Badger

Predators may be indirectly protecting region’s wetlands Camera trap image of a cougar with a donkey

A cougar caught killing a juvenile donkey in the early hours of the morning in Death Valley National Park - ERICK LUNDGREN

For humans and wildlife alike, feral donkeys can be a pain in the ass. Large and full of attitude, the scruffy vegetation-destroying equids steal resources from native sheep and tortoises, poop in precious spring water, and cost many a park manager a good night’s sleep.

They aren’t unstoppable, however. In Death Valley National Park, researchers have captured the first photographic evidence of donkeys falling prey to the claws of a native predator: the cougar. The relationship is shaping the area’s wetlands, the team argues, and has raised questions about the management of wild equids going forward.

“This is cool stuff,” says wildlife biologist Kate Schoenecker of the U.S. Geological Survey's Fort Collins Science Center who studies cougar predation on wild horses but was not involved with the research. “It’s helping us understand the effect these interactions with [wild equids] have on the North American landscape.”

Donkeys, often called burros in the Americas, first arrived with Spanish colonizers in the 1500s. They became invaluable as pack animals and mine workers for Western pioneers in the 1800s. At the end of the mining boom, however, most burros escaped or were turned loose.

Able to tolerate tough desert conditions, the abandoned animals quickly established feral populations in Arizona and Southern California. Although the exact numbers are disputed, the Bureau of Land Management estimates the wild burro population at about 17,000 individuals—much smaller and more localized than the wild horse population of more than 60,000. As a result, the animals attract less mainstream attention, says ecologist Erick Lundgren of Aarhus University, who led the new study. “Donkeys are the forgotten little desert guy,” he says. “They’re easily overlooked.”

The animals don’t get much respect from the U.S. National Park Service either. Because burros are considered a nuisance for eating and trampling delicate vegetation, polluting water, and preventing other creatures from using springs, the agency strictly manages the population in Death Valley, where many of them live, by capturing them and sending them to animal rescue organizations for adoption. It eventually plans to remove all donkeys from the park. Part of the reason for this management was a general consensus that, like other invasive species, the donkeys have no natural predators to keep them in check.

Some ecologists and park staff in Death Valley have found evidence suggesting otherwise: sightings of cougars eating donkey carcasses, or carcasses stashed near cougar trails or scat. However, Lundgren says that without concrete proof, many other scientists have dismissed the idea.

Lundgren, who did his master’s degree at Arizona State University, Tempe, and had long been fascinated with feral equids, thought the cougars were indeed preying on donkeys and wanted to prove it. He and colleagues set up camera traps across cougar territories in Arizona and California to monitor cougar and donkey activity. Then, he crossed his fingers and waited.

One day in 2019, he found more than he bargained for. One camera had slipped so it faced the ground, collecting thousands of useless images of dirt. But as Lundgren prepared to delete the images, an odd shape in the corner of one photo caught his eye.

Lundgren realized he was seeing a cougar and a burro caught midstruggle as the cougar wrestled the donkey to the ground. With one eye closed, the bloody cat seemed to be staring straight into the camera as its powerful front paws coiled around the burro’s forehead. The following year, Lundgren caught another cougar killing a burro on camera, this time at night. The camera had captured the entire sequence, from the cougar latching onto the panicked burro’s haunches to the triumphant cat standing over its dead prey.

“Capturing that kill on camera was a great moment of validation,” Lundgren says. Immediately, his mind went to trophic cascades, phenomena in which a single type of predator hunting a certain prey animal can affect an entire ecosystem, down to the smallest blade of grass. Wolves famously have this effect in Yellowstone; by hunting elk, they prevent overgrazing on delicate saplings and allow other species such as beavers to access more resources. This change is only partially accomplished through predation itself: Once predators enter a landscape, prey learn to fear the places their brethren have been killed and spend less time grazing in those areas. Lundgren had long suspected cougars could be having a similar impact by hunting burros.

A wild burro

A wild burro in the Butte Valley of Death Valley National Park - MICHAEL ALFUSO

To explore his theory, he headed to Death Valley, one of the few places where wild donkeys live and cougars are protected. Given the park’s name, it’s easy to imagine it as a dry, lifeless desert, Lundgren says, but deep inside, the land is pocked by springs and wetlands. These wetlands are a magnet for thirsty donkeys, which made them an ideal place for Lundgren to conduct his research. In all, he and his team monitored 14 wetland sites.

In the five sites where cougars were absent, likely because they were close to human campsites that would scare the big cats away, the donkeys hung around for an average of 5.5 hours at a time during hot days. However, in the sites where cougars were present, donkeys stayed for an average of only 40 minutes at a time, and didn’t stick around much at night, when cougars hunt more often.

The vegetation in sites less frequented by donkeys had more plants growing and fewer signs of trampling. By making donkeys more wary of wetland sites, the cougars were promoting a greener and healthier landscape, Lundgren and his colleagues reported last week in the Journal of Animal Ecology.

To Lundgren, this relationship between cougars, donkeys, and vegetation suggests the burros are not a blight on Death Valley’s landscape and shouldn’t be entirely removed. With cougars keeping donkeys from destroying wetlands, he says donkeys’ beneficial behaviors have a better chance to shine through.

For instance, Lundgren’s ongoing research has shown that by clearing the vegetation around the valley’s springs, the equids were keeping the pools from drying out and allowing endangered fish there to survive. Furthermore, with no burros to hunt, he thinks cougars would disperse elsewhere or turn to bighorn sheep, the park’s native midsize herbivore, which is already vulnerable to climate change and disease.

The evidence that cougars hunt donkeys and influence their behavior is strong, says Mark Boyce, an ecologist at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, who has worked with cougars and trophic cascades. But he doesn’t think this knowledge should affect burro management. “This is an invasive exotic species,” he says. “It would be a serious mistake to conclude that because cougars kill donkeys, we do not need to remove donkeys.”

Schoenecker agrees. Donkeys, like horses, are a domesticated species, she notes, so they’ve been artificially selected over thousands of years to reproduce more often than untamed herbivores such as bighorn sheep. Cougar predation, she argues, isn’t enough to manage them.

Abby Wines, a management analyst at Death Valley National Park, says the new study won’t change the park’s goal of removing donkeys. Any ecological boons the burros provide, such as clearing unwanted vegetation, can also be done by the park staff, she states.

Despite her concerns, Schoenecker believes the new study is an exciting starting point for future research and continues the often-difficult conversation on controlling feral domesticated animals. “It’s really interesting and helpful to see their data,” she says. “It certainly makes you want to go out and test more of these things, and that’s a good thing.”

doi: 10.1126/science.ade2328


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Outdoors; Pets/Animals; Travel
KEYWORDS: tldr
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To: Inyo-Mono

We watch for them when going to or from Vegas from Reno. Lots of wild horses up here too.


61 posted on 08/05/2022 3:46:14 PM PDT by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this? 😕)
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To: heavy metal

You’re correct about that.

I have some sweet shotguns I never use or even pull them out of the safe because of my dogs. I need precise surgical shots.

So I use handguns. .357 S&W 6 inch barrel for Bear, Elk (Bulls are extremely aggressive) and coyotes for distance. We see evidence of wolves and hear them rarely, but they stay away as do big cats.

I have a Baby Desert Eagle 9mm for small needs. I’ve had to shoot a rabid skunk, rabid feral cat, and a female porcupine that moved close to the house and posed a danger to my dogs. My winter 9mm is a Browning Hi Power.

My dogs are gun trained and I added when they hear shots fired, even off in distance from hunters they come to me.


62 posted on 08/05/2022 3:54:33 PM PDT by David Chase
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To: KC Burke

i live in the wilderness of suwannee county florida...

i’ve heard and seen the damage they cause...

and shot a couple in the process...


63 posted on 08/05/2022 4:38:58 PM PDT by heavy metal (smiling improves your face value and makes people wonder what the hell you're up to... 😁)
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To: heavy metal

LOL, I am sure you have. I was writing for the general reader, not so much as though I could advise you. I hadn’t know about wild burros being so effective with coyote until I lived in the desert for ten years.


64 posted on 08/05/2022 5:59:00 PM PDT by KC Burke (If all the world is a stage, I would like to request my lighting be adjusted.)
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To: David Chase

i lost all of my firearms in a boating accident...


65 posted on 08/06/2022 3:04:22 AM PDT by heavy metal (smiling improves your face value and makes people wonder what the hell you're up to... 😁)
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To: Inyo-Mono

Spent the night at Stovepipe Wells last May. Experienced a real dust storm, a new phenomenon for me and mrs abb. Don’t have those things here in North Louisiana.


66 posted on 08/06/2022 3:15:07 AM PDT by abb
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To: dfwgator

Nice caption! It constantly amazes me about how people spend our tax money on things that all they have to do is stop and ask a local. Over the years I’ve hunted many areas in the West where donkeys are now indigenous. I have seen many carcasses of donkeys that were killed by mt. lions. If I asked the hunting circle for pictures of a mountain lion over donkey carcass I’m sure that a few would appear in short order.

By the way the donkeys have an interesting behavior that helps to thwart a predator attack. They line up on the top of a small ridge about 30 feet apart and watch over everything in front of them, scattering if the danger gets too close.


67 posted on 08/06/2022 3:19:30 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$
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To: rktman

Might add a motorist warning - the donkeys walk in the roadway whenever they want to.


68 posted on 08/06/2022 3:21:46 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$
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To: David Chase

Young donkey. Not a deer.


69 posted on 08/06/2022 3:24:21 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$
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To: mad_as_he$$

As do the wild horses.


70 posted on 08/06/2022 7:22:29 AM PDT by rktman (Destroy America from within? Check! WTH? Enlisted USN 1967 to end up with this? 😕)
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To: rktman

Yup. But the donkeys do it with attitude! ;-)

Spent the night in Beatty last year, when we got ready to leave the donkeys were having their morning parade down 95 and we had to just parade with them.


71 posted on 08/06/2022 7:40:11 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$
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To: blackdog

Unlike the gal in Florida, arrested for doing a dog, and got the wrong kind of DILF.


72 posted on 08/06/2022 12:08:13 PM PDT by DPMD ( )
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To: AJFavish

😜..............................I remember that show!..


73 posted on 08/08/2022 5:17:51 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Iowa Granny; Ladysmith; Diana in Wisconsin; JLO; sergeantdave; damncat; phantomworker; joesnuffy; ..
Outdoors/Rural/wildlife/hunting/hiking/backpacking/National Parks/animals list please FR mail me to be on or off . And ping me is you see articles of interest.

Why wouldn't they?

74 posted on 08/08/2022 5:20:32 AM PDT by SJackson (nations that are barren of liberties are also barren of groceries, Louis Fisher)
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To: SJackson

The reason for hunting cougars is that they will bread and multiply so long as their population can be sustained by the population of prey. It’s like rats and grain storage.


75 posted on 08/08/2022 5:24:39 AM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: Red Badger

Cougars prefer small wild asses.


76 posted on 08/08/2022 8:30:10 AM PDT by wyokostur
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To: wyokostur

... and usually hunt them at the local watering holes......................


77 posted on 08/08/2022 8:33:01 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegal aliens are put up in hotels.....................)
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To: Red Badger

lol


78 posted on 08/08/2022 1:19:10 PM PDT by wyokostur
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