DNA used to understand deadly mountain lion attacks on pets in Santa Cruz Mountains

At dawn, silent and unseen, a mountain lion climbed over a tall iron gate and crept down the driveway of Ron Aldana’s Los Gatos ranch, pouncing on his pet goat Chupita and killing her instantly.

But the deadly attack left behind an important clue: saliva.

A sample, quickly swabbed from the wounds of the dead goat, is part of a small but growing collection of DNA from wild predators collected for the new Bay Area Carnivore-Livestock Interactions Project (BACLIP).

Like crime-scene DNA collected by police, a trace amount of genetic material can reveal the identity of the mountain lions or coyotes that hunt on the edges of our communities, sometimes killing pets and livestock.

A coyote eats a gopher at the Foothills Nature Preserve in Palo Alto, Calif., on Thursday, May 30, 2023. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
A coyote eats a gopher at the Foothills Nature Preserve in Palo Alto, Calif., on Thursday, May 30, 2023. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) 

Developed after extensive conversations with local livestock producers, BACLIP is a partnership between the nonprofit Panthera and the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District, UC Cooperative Extension, UC Santa Cruz and CSU Fort Collins, among others.

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