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Mountain lions in Los Angeles are so inbred they have L-shaped tails

A few dozen mountain lions are trapped in a rural patch of Los Angeles by highways that limit their movement, and have become so inbred they developed kinks in their tails
mountain lion
The mountain lions (Puma concolor) of Los Angeles now show signs of inbreeding
Courtesy of National Park Service

The mountain lions in Los Angeles鈥檚 Santa Monica mountains are so isolated from other cats 鈥 hemmed in by freeways and urban development 鈥 that biologists have long been worried they are at high risk of becoming inbred to the point of sterility. This week, researchers in California : three have L-shaped kinks at the end of their tails. What鈥檚 more, some of the males have cryptorchidism, a condition in which the testes fail to descend.

The local genetic diversity of mountain lions is the lowest of any lion population in the western US. A population in Florida in the eastern US 鈥 where the species is known as the Florida panther 鈥 had lower genetic diversity a few decades ago. Those cats also developed abnormalities.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing some of those exact same defects as Florida panthers,鈥 says Seth Riley, the National Park Service (NPS) wildlife branch chief of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, who led the study.

Matings between offspring are common and some LA lions kill others to secure access to territory and mates. Just a handful have successfully navigated across the region鈥檚 highways over the last two decades, and many have died trying.

mountain lion tail
The kinked tail of a young male mountain lion
Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area

Holly Ernest at the University of Wyoming says that just 聽and聽that the abnormalities are 鈥渄efinitely concerning鈥.

鈥淭his is something we hoped to never see,鈥 said Jeff Sikich, the NPS wildlife biologist who discovered the first kink-tailed mountain lion in March.

It is unclear whether tail variations effect sexual selection 鈥 for instance, if females will reject males with the kinked tails 鈥 but the species has displayed other odd features. In 2016, a young male in Idaho was , although this looks more like a chromosomal aberration than the result of inbreeding, says Kyle Gustafson at Arkansas State University.

In Florida, a mountain lion population in danger of becoming inbred was saved by the introduction of eight females from Texas.聽Shipping mountain lions to LA probably won鈥檛 work, however. An adult male鈥檚 range can extend more than 500 square kilometres, but the Santa Monica mountains encompass only about 700 square kilometres 鈥 and wildfires scorched half the area in 2018, 鈥渟queezing the animals even more鈥, says Riley, the NPS study lead.

A proposed bridge over a freeway could be a fix, but it would pricey, costing around $85 million. Despite public support, the bridge project has only raised around $15 million. Riley hopes that the project will break ground in late 2021.

鈥淔olks are focused on other things with the state of the world, but plenty of people are interested in conservation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f we increase connectivity and have animals moving back and forth, that鈥檚 a permanent solution, not just for mountain lions. Roads impact the genetics of everything from lizards to birds to bobcats. We鈥檙e the second largest metropolitan area in the country. Connectivity benefits all of us.鈥

Topics: cats