1 hr 7 min

Yellowstone's Resilient Cougars Voices of Greater Yellowstone

    • Nature

Panther, painter, mountain screamer. Catamount, ghost cat, puma. These are just a few of the regional and colloquial names for an elusive carnivore that stalks the wilds of Greater Yellowstone. It’s an animal many folks go their whole lives sharing habitat with without seeing even once in the wild.  Here in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, it is more commonly known as the mountain lion or cougar.  
In Episode 09, we are sitting down with Daniel Stahler of Yellowstone National Park. Dan is a wildlife biologist who has been working in the park for 25 years, and—among many other things—serves as project leader of the Yellowstone Cougar Project.  
We discuss everything from how to confidently identify mountain lions, to how they quietly reintroduced themselves to Yellowstone after being nearly hunted out of existence in the early 20th century, to how the Yellowstone Cougar Project keeps tabs on the park’s few dozen cats today.  And of course, Dan shares some memorable stories from his time in the field working hands-on with these magnificent animals and their mega cute offspring. 
So, grab your housecat and curl up with us for episode nine of the Voices of Greater Yellowstone podcast: Yellowstone’s Resilient Cougars.
 
Voices of Greater Yellowstone was created by the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, a conservation nonprofit dedicated to working with people to protect the lands, waters, and wildlife of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, now and for future generations.
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is the land of 49+ Indigenous Tribes who maintain current and ancestral connections to the lands, waters, wildlife, plants, and more.

> Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get podcasts.

> Sign-up for our podcast supporter email list

> Tell us which is cutest: cougar kittens, wolf pups, or grizzly bear cubs

> Cougar facts!

> Yellowstone Cougar Project

> Support the podcast and give a gift to GYC

Podcast Artwork > Rachel Dunlap Art

Music >
Redwood Trail by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Artist: http://audionautix.com/
Support the Show.

Panther, painter, mountain screamer. Catamount, ghost cat, puma. These are just a few of the regional and colloquial names for an elusive carnivore that stalks the wilds of Greater Yellowstone. It’s an animal many folks go their whole lives sharing habitat with without seeing even once in the wild.  Here in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, it is more commonly known as the mountain lion or cougar.  
In Episode 09, we are sitting down with Daniel Stahler of Yellowstone National Park. Dan is a wildlife biologist who has been working in the park for 25 years, and—among many other things—serves as project leader of the Yellowstone Cougar Project.  
We discuss everything from how to confidently identify mountain lions, to how they quietly reintroduced themselves to Yellowstone after being nearly hunted out of existence in the early 20th century, to how the Yellowstone Cougar Project keeps tabs on the park’s few dozen cats today.  And of course, Dan shares some memorable stories from his time in the field working hands-on with these magnificent animals and their mega cute offspring. 
So, grab your housecat and curl up with us for episode nine of the Voices of Greater Yellowstone podcast: Yellowstone’s Resilient Cougars.
 
Voices of Greater Yellowstone was created by the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, a conservation nonprofit dedicated to working with people to protect the lands, waters, and wildlife of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, now and for future generations.
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is the land of 49+ Indigenous Tribes who maintain current and ancestral connections to the lands, waters, wildlife, plants, and more.

> Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get podcasts.

> Sign-up for our podcast supporter email list

> Tell us which is cutest: cougar kittens, wolf pups, or grizzly bear cubs

> Cougar facts!

> Yellowstone Cougar Project

> Support the podcast and give a gift to GYC

Podcast Artwork > Rachel Dunlap Art

Music >
Redwood Trail by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Artist: http://audionautix.com/
Support the Show.

1 hr 7 min