Cougar Reproduction
Cougar Reproduction
The female Cougars are ready to mate when they are from 1 ½ to 3 years of age. The males are ready to mate from
2 to 4 years. The pairs aren’t very social with each other but will tolerate each other for mating. They can take
part in the activity often and the females often have many partners. As a result her young may be from several
different males.
After successful mating has taken place the female will carry the young in her body for about 90 days. She will
find a place to use as a den so that they can be well protected when they are born. These young are very vulnerable
at birth due to being blind and birth. The instinctively are able to find their mother’s body for warmth and for
milk.
The young Cougars are called kittens and they will be well cared for by their mothers. She may have from 1 to 6
of them at a time. She is extremely protective of them and will fight off huge predators including Grizzly Bears.
They will be weaned from the milk when they are about 3 months of age.
Then they will venture out with their mother for play and for learning. They often rough house with each other
as a way to get stronger and to determine their own dominance among the siblings. That ranking is important because
if food is in short supply the strongest and highest ranking are the ones that will get the food that is
available.
It can be extremely difficult for a mother Cougar to constantly hunt enough food for her young. When they are
about 6 months old they will start assisting her with the hunt. This helps to reduce that burden on her. It also
helps to ensure the young will have the necessary skills they need to hunt on their own later in life.
When the kittens are about 2 years of age they will have to leave the care of their mother. However, the
mortality rate is about 90% between starvation, predators, and other acts that occur in nature. It can be very hard
for many of them to make it to maturity. The larger that the Cougars get though the better chance they have of
surviving.
The lifespan in the wild for a Cougar if they do live those crucial first couple of years ranges from 8 to 13
years. This is compared to 20 years for those that are born and raised in captivity. Due to the high mortality
rates there have been programs that take the young from the wild and raise them at sanctuaries and zoos. That way
there is going to be a population increase.
There are areas where the young Cougars are taken and sold. There are people around the world that love the
Cougar and they find it to be very interesting. They want to be able to own such an exotic pet. They like they idea
of having something that no one else does. They also have the idea that if they raise it from early on they can
domesticate it.
Many people have been able to do this but there are also instances where the owners are attacked. It can be very
expensive to keep a Cougar due to the amount of food that they consume daily. They are also very powerful animals
and so if one was to attack you there is very little chance you would be able to get away from them. There have
been some hybrid mating in captivity between the Cougar and the Leopard too known as the Pumapard.
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