Puma P-22’s Potential Successor Tries Out Hollywood Range

The new puma will have big paw prints to fill if it decides to make its famous predecessor’s range its own. People in Los Angeles are thrilled to have another mountain lion prowling the Hollywood Hills.

When the mountain lion known as P-22 died in late 2022, people in Los Angeles were so distraught they painted murals of him on building facades, buried him after a indigenous tribal funeral and even held a festival in his honor.

The famous feline had already been the subject of books, documentaries and an iconic photograph by National Geographic’s Steve Winter. The image showed P-22 in mid-stride, perfectly centered in a small pool of light beneath the Hollywood sign in the hills of Los Angeles at night. It was a natural symbol of wildlife adapting and surviving.

The love for P-22 wasn’t only based on the incredible fact that a mountain lion had established his “range” in Griffith Park, an oasis of wilderness surrounded by urban landscapes. The puma had to cross Interstate 405 and Route 101, heavy-traffic highways that are famously lethal to his species, to get there. For the next decade he skillfully avoided cars and trucks as he went about his business, popping up on trail cameras or in the backyards of Los Angelinos.

Now there’s a potential successor to the vacant throne.

The new puma isn’t collared and wildlife experts don’t know where it came from, but like P-22 it had to cross several dangerous highways to reach the city.

It’s not clear yet if the mountain lion is male or female. Jeff Sikitch, a biologist with the National Parks Service who is part of an ongoing, decades-long study of pumas, told the Los Angeles Times that he thinks the cat is likely a young male, but there’s not much to go on so far except for witness sightings and a low-resolution video taken by a man who lives in an apartment building near the edge of Griffith Park.

“Will this cat be as skilled as P-22 was at avoiding cars for a decade?” the National Wildlife Federation’s Beth Pratt told the BBC. “We don’t know what’s going to happen here.”

New puma in LA
The only images of the newcomer so far are grainy video stills, but Griffith Park itself has trail cameras that are used to monitor wildlife. Credit: Vladimir Polumiskov

For now, wildlife officials are waiting and watching to see if the potential puma successor puts down roots in P-22’s old hunting grounds or tries to make the dangerous trek out of the city.

If the new puma decides to stay, it will enjoy plentiful deer and a benefit most members of its species do not have — a local population that understands mountain lion attacks are extraordinarily rare, and will support them by giving them a wide berth.

On the other hand, despite the 4,000 acres of Griffith Park and the residential neighborhoods below, the cat’s inherited range would be much smaller than what’s typical for the species. Like humans cramming belongings into apartments, pumas sacrifice space when they live in or around cities.

Suzanne Pye, a local who admired P-22 from afar, said she welcomes the newcomer and isn’t worried about attacks on people. The presence of a mountain lion after almost 18 months without one prowling the hills, she said, will add “a frisson of excitement to the morning hikes.”

P-22_2019
A close-up of P-22 in 2019, when he was briefly captured for a health check-up. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

8 thoughts on “Puma P-22’s Potential Successor Tries Out Hollywood Range”

  1. Beautiful! – this made my day – may P-22 be blessed over the rainbow bridge ( a nicer name would have been nice!) – Bastet approves

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    1. Yeah he was unimaginatively named “Puma 22” in the study. The people who run the study are saying the new one will be P-122 in tribute to the late 22 if the newcomer decides to settle in Griffith Park.

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  2. Thanks for this sensitve post about P-122’s potential successor. When I lived in Oklahoma a few years ago, a beautiful mountain lion regularly walked along the fence that separated our yard from a semi-wild area, and although he never bothered anybody, I was terrified that somebody might shoot him. Articles like yours will help spread the word that attacks from these magnificent creatures are vanishingly rare. I’m living proof!

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Thanks for this sensitve post about P-122’s potential successor. When I lived in Oklahoma a few years ago, a beautiful mountain lion regularly walked along the fence that separated our yard from a semi-wild area, and although he never bothered anybody, I was terrified that somebody might shoot him. Articles like yours will help spread the word that attacks from these magnificent creatures are vanishingly rare.

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    1. Indeed, it’s frustrating to see how many people think pumas are the same as African lions and think the only way to deal with them is to shoot them.

      As adaptable as they are, their carved-up habitats and major highways between them mean lots of pumas are killed while looking for places to range, and it’s difficult for them to find mates and reproduce.

      It would be a tragedy if these beautiful animals are extirpated from the US.

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