Eastern Cougar, Perhaps (1) Most outdoor enthusiasts know that Cougars are fast and agile animals that can live for many years without real predators other than humans. Another name of Cougar is a mountain lion that is often used. And many eastern provinces named it a store, a school and even a sports team. The difference between the Mississippi River and the Eastern Province invasion of the Cougar can not be proved because there are many animals to the east of the west. Craig Springer's "America's Rumors" describes three interesting errors, distracting errors, and two causal errors in articles published in the "Fields and Streams" magazine. A lie.
In the east of the Mississippi River, the only known cougar group is Florida Panther. Until 2011, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) provides protection under the Endangered Species Act, claiming eastern Cougar (which is claimed to be a subspecies and denied by others) I approved Florida Panthers. Some classification authorities have classified both names as North American cougars, the eastern or Florida subspecies have not been recognized and some subspecies names are still recognized by protective scientists. The number of population records in Florida in 2003 was 87. In March 2011, USFWS announced the annihilation of Eastern Puma. The subject remains unresolved due to its taxonomic uncertainty as a subspecies and the possibility of moving a cougar from west to east.
Gray wolves were once roaming in eastern United States, but now they are extinct from this area. Eastern Cougars were also as generic as Cougars in the western part of the United States but were considered extinct by the US Fish and Wildlife Service in 2011. The elk of the East lived everywhere in the east, but it was excluded in the 19th century. In 1880, it was declared extinct by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Elk was once roaming around the East, but now it is only seen in northern New England. Sea otters were arrested in 1903 by their very precious fur.