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    • Alabama. Mountain Lions have a status of extirpated in Alabama, there have been no confirmed sightings in the state in over 50 years. There are occasional reports of people who think they saw one, maybe they even took a blurry picture, but those are most likely bobcats.
    • Alaska. Alaska is one of the few states where mountain lions are not technically native to and there is currently no breeding population of Mountain Lions in Alaska.
    • Arizona. Mountain lions can be found throughout Arizona, and data suggests the populations are not only stable, but growing. The current estimate is 2,500 – 3,000 throughout Arizona.
    • Arkansas. There is not currently a known breeding population of mountain lions in Arkansas and there hasn’t been in decades. There have been between 20-25 sightings of mountain lions in the state since 2010, but no evidence to support that these animals are breeding here and not just passing through.
  2. Oct 25, 2019 · Estimated harvest rates for mountain lions in Arizona, USA, by age class, 2004–2018. Figures include 95% confidence intervals for age 0 (A), age 1 (B), age 2 (C), and age ≥3 (D).

    • April L. Howard, Matthew J. Clement, Frances R. Peck, Esther S. Rubin
    • 5
    • 2020
    • 25 October 2019
  3. Mountain lions can be found throughout Arizona and are most common in rocky or mountainous terrain. Because mountain lions are shy and elusive, people do not often see them. Mountain lions are solitary animals with the exception of females with kittens or breeding pairs.

  4. For the 2022-2023 hunting season, which lasts nine months, the Arizona Game and Fish Department set mountain lion harvest thresholds at 354 lions. A study published by Howard et al. (2020) estimated the statewide subadult and adult population to be 1166-1715 mountain lions.

  5. Jun 17, 2024 · Arizona: 2,000-3,000 mountain lions thrive in the state's rocky habitats. Arkansas: A small but growing population of about 30 mountain lions.

    • Marni Rose Mcfall
  6. Aug 12, 2024 · In the most recent sighting, the cat in question turned out to be a lynx. At this point, there’s no proof of transient or resident mountain lions in Alaska. Arizona: 1,3002,700. Arizona has a stable population of mountain lions. They tend to live in mountainous areas and rocky hills. The state allows controlled hunting of them.

  7. The mountain lion occurs throughout the western hemisphere and has one of the most extensive ranges of any land mammal, from the Straights of Magellan in South America to the Canadian Yukon. In Arizona, mountain lions are widely distributed and are expanding into regions where they were once rare.

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