Are There Mountain Lions in New Jersey?

Sightings of mountain lions abound in the eastern United States. What’s the real story?

I raised my binoculars, expecting to get a view of a mule deer. I often spotted them in this little valley, and when I saw the tan form, I knew what it was. Or thought I knew. Because as I focused on the animal, something seemed off. And then it moved. It had a long tail.

A mountain lion. While the encounter only lasted seconds – the big cat quickly bounded away – it remains one of my favorite wildlife sightings.

I saw this lion in the canyon country of southwestern Idaho. It may have been a spectacular sight, but no one questioned me. Mountain lions are fairly common, if seldom seen, in Idaho.

On the other side of the country, mountain lion sightings evoke a fiery passion. Many fervently believe mountain lions stalk much of the eastern United States, including the most densely populated state, New Jersey.

Idaho’s Owyhee County, where I saw my first mountain lion, is larger than the entire state of New Jersey. And it is home to fewer than 13,000 people. There’s plenty of space for a mountain lion to hide. In New Jersey, with 9.25 million people? Much less so.

Still, sightings persist. Are there mountain lions in New Jersey? Is it even a remote possibility?

A mountain Lion at TNC’s Phantom Canyon Preserve captured on a trail camera. © Andrew Bushnell/TNC & Fernando Boza.

The Eastern Lion

I’ve followed the arguments over eastern mountain lions for decades. I grew up in the woods of Pennsylvania and know the strong opinions this topic generates. In fact, the first outdoor story I was ever paid to write – for Pennsylvania Afield (now Pennsylvania Outdoor News) in 1991 – was about mountain lion rumors in Pennsylvania.

I found it a fascinating subject. You could hear some wild stories sitting around small-town bars. The state game agency is unloading truckloads of mountain lions at night. Not only are there mountain lions, but also black panthers. That sort of thing.

But not all lion incidents could be so easily dismissed, told by serious hunters, naturalists and loggers. These were people who spent a lot of time in the woods and were not prone to Bigfoot-style tall tales.

Eric Olsen, director of conservation programs for The Nature Conservancy in New Jersey, has heard the stories, too. “I’ve talked to more people who believe they’ve seen mountain lions then I can count,” says Olsen. “It does make you think. But I’m a skeptic that there are mountain lions here in New Jersey.”

Big cat habitat in the Delaware Water Gap © Jim Lukach

Mountain lions once ranged across much of the United States, but they were eradicated from most parts of the East by the early 1800s. The population in Florida has managed to hang on. Elsewhere, actual evidence – photographs, camera trap footage, verifiable signs – remains slim.

But there are actual instances that fuel hope. In 2011, a lion was confirmed to be in Connecticut. It had roamed from South Dakota through the Midwest and East. (The full story is masterfully told in Will Stolzenburg’s book, Heart of a Lion). With many western populations of mountain lions thriving, individuals could disperse and find abundant white-tailed deer in the East. But could they survive and thrive there?

The Connecticut lion could not: it was killed by a car strike.

Mountain lion and kitten spotted on a trail camera at Fisher’s Peak State Park, Colorado. © Chris Pague / TNC

“There are places in New Jersey big enough to sustain a mountain lion or two,” says Olsen. “But there are still people who reside in those landscapes. There are still roads. I would love to think that New Jersey could sustain mountain lions. But the hard evidence has not been found.”

He notes that biologists have utilized scat-sniffing dogs to find evidence of bobcats (more on this species later). The Nature Conservancy and other organizations have wildlife cameras at road-stream crossings, at preserves and in other areas used by wildlife. And still: no evidence.

I’m a skeptic too, in no small part because of my experience with mountain lions in the western United States. They are certainly elusive and difficult to spot. Even where they’re common, you rarely if ever catch a glimpse of one. They often roam in some of the largest wildernesses and national forests in the continental United States.

While sightings may not be common, people do see them, photograph them, find easily verifiable kills and tracks and scat. Animals get killed on the road. There’s never any doubt. They’re here.

So what exactly is going on with mountain lion sightings in the eastern U.S.?

A bobcat at Blair Creek Preserve. © Tyler Christensen

A Case of Mistaken Identity?

I pose the question to my friend and former Nature Conservancy forester Mike Eckley. Eckley has spent years on forest projects in Penn’s Woods, including the area in the central part of the state known as the “Pennsylvania Wilds.” He tells me he’s never seen any evidence, either, but has heard many stories from reliable sources.

“A key thing to remember is that there are a lot of people who are into exotic, wild pets,” says Eckley, now a lecturer in forestry at Penn State-Dubois. “Sometimes these animals can escape or be intentionally released. A lot of sightings are actually near urban areas. People might see a mountain lion that’s a released pet, and then these animals tend to quickly perish.”

It brings back a memory from my Pennsylvania youth, when my grandparents took me to visit a friend who kept a pet mountain lion in their backyard. I recall the fence made me a little nervous,  and few would have been surprised if that cat escaped. Indeed, a lot of really weird animal sightings around the globe are due to animals escaped or released from private zoos and game farms.

bobcat crouching in foliage
A bobcat in Warren County, NJ. © Jim Thomson

But perhaps a more common reason for all the mountain lions is simple misidentification. Bobcat populations have increased significantly, a huge conservation success. In New Jersey, bobcats were extirpated but reintroduced in the 1970s. “There are now an estimated 350 bobcats in New Jersey,” says Olsen. “They’ve learned to live within human-inhabited landscapes.”

They are also shy and elusive, but people do encounter them. And it’s not unusual for people to mistake them for mountain lions. “If you’re seeing a bobcat for the first time, they’re larger than you think,” Olsen says. “I can understand how you could think it was a mountain lion.”

Eckley agrees. “I think misidentification is the most common explanation,” he says. “A lot of times, whether in an actual sighting or a camera trap, there’s no frame of reference. It looks like a really big cat.”

a bobcat walks toward the camera at night
A bobcat at New Jersey’s Blair Creek Preserve © Tyler Christensen

If you’re wondering, there are a couple of things that can help. First, refer to my previous field guide to commonly misidentified wildlife. Namely, this rule: “If in doubt, it’s probably the least exciting option.” You simply have to rule out bobcat before you can ID a cat as a cougar.

There’s one really simple distinguishing characteristic: the tail. The bobcat, as its name implies, has a bobbed tail, quite short and stubby. The mountain lion has an unmistakably long tail.

Assessments like this invariably make some people angry. Both Olsen and Eckley note they have not ruled out the possibility of mountain lions. They just want to see hard evidence.

puma tracks in dried mud
Mountain lion tracks at TNC’s Iron Bridge Preserve in New Mexico. © Jason Whalen | Fauna Creative

Could Lions Return to the East?

To me, the most compelling question is not “Do mountain lions exist in New Jersey?” It’s: “Could they?”

I recently fished for brook trout in New Jersey’s portion of the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area. As I walked along beautiful mountain streams, I saw tracks of black bear and whitetail, and caught beautiful native trout. At times, it felt difficult to believe I was so close to millions of people.

Olsen notes that New Jersey is projected to be the first state in the nation to reach functional buildout, meaning nearly all land has been developed or conserved. But he notes that conservation has also been remarkably successful in such a densely populated state. New Jersey’s Green Acres program and many non-profit organizations, towns and counties have played important roles in preserving land.

TNC has protected more than 60,000 acres in New Jersey, no small task in a small, highly populated state with high property values. Lately, establishing corridors between conserved lands has taken on new importance with species needing space to move amidst dense roadways and challenging climate conditions. One such effort is protecting a 96,000-acre corridor for bobcats to move, known as “Bobcat Alley.”

view of a forest and lake from a high vantage point
A view over Fairview Lake and Blair Creek Preserve, part of New Jersey’s “Bobcat Alley.” © Jim Wright

“We’re protecting forests, fields and farmlands, preserving the best of what’s left for nature so species have the ability to thrive,” says Olsen. “And then we take it the next step: how can we connect protected areas in other states in the Appalachians?”

TNC’s work in the Appalachians focuses heavily on this connectivity. That gives species room to adapt and roam.

Mountain lions are famous roamers. They’re territorial, so young animals often strike out in search of new territory. If they came east, they’d need these connected lands. And they’d need prey. “The prey base is there,” says Olsen. “Our ecosystem is out of balance with too many deer. The forests are suffering as a result. The mountain lions would have plenty to eat.”

New Jersey's Bobcat Alley

Once nearly extinct in New Jersey, bobcats are trying to make a comeback. To survive, they need room to roam.

As such, the eastern mountain lion must be considered not a creature of the past or of myth, but a creature of hope.

“I bring a lot of skepticism to the topic, but I also do have hope,” says Olsen. “I hope that we will have done a good enough job of protecting and connecting habitat that there could be a time when lions arrive on their own – and survive and thrive here.”

For now, bobcats remain New Jersey’s only native wild feline, and even they can lose as much as 25 percent of their annual population to automobiles. Protecting and connecting strategic land in New Jersey and the Appalachian states is the best way to ensure they continue to have a home – and maybe even to give big cats with longer tails a chance to survive in the East.

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58 comments

  1. Carolyn Pearl says:

    The “shy, elusive” bobcats here in North Central Texas are so unfazed by humans in River Legacy Park that they’ll walk past you closely, but unconcerned. I’ve had them step out of the woods and cross the paved trail within 5′ of me, looking up with a ‘oh, it’s just you’ dismissiveness that’s both impressive and laughable. They’re far more adaptable than most realize.

  2. Linda hargrove says:

    There building so much in nj I pray there are none here All the new people. Moving in , and the land loss people see deer& bears,
    They complain and the animal ends up on open season. So I pray for the mountain lion not to be here tho zi would love to see one, oh and then you get the people with NO brains wanting to get close to wild life for a selfie and if the animal attacks for invading his space he
    ends up dead.

  3. Dwight David Blazier says:

    TWRA Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency has confirmed the existence of multiple lions in eight counties. Trail cams,scat,tracks and kills. They are certain of viable mating pairs in three of said counties. I agree that the large deer herds have made it easier for migration of these cats to find their own territory. Great article of yours. God bless

  4. William H. Langeman says:

    Here in Tucson it’s not at all unusual for female bobcats to raise their kittens in the backyard of someone whose house is empty for the summer and has a water feature. Used to happen all the time in my parents’ subdivision.

  5. Martin A. Walsh says:

    My Uncle and his son have seen mountain lions in Sullivan County in New York. My Uncle was a linesman for the phone company and also owned (now his son’s) 51 acres of land there. He saw three of them when he was elevated on a pole. When I asked both of them how they knew it wasn’t a bobcat, they both said “The long tail”. My Brother lived in West Simmsbury, Connecticut before 2011 and had a mountain Lion in his backyard. An animal control officer came out and identified a print left in the snow. If they are there, they can be hiding in New Jersey also.

  6. Kevin Sabine says:

    For rangers and conservation consultants alike if you think for one second that they’re no cougars being in eastern USA or Eastern Canada should look for another job. They’re obviously not doing their jobs, what other mammals on earth has a tail as long as it’s body in eastern America’s besides a cougar, even after they have pictures and video of such have. They got to be a complete moron if you don’t believe it exists so is it a western cougar that migrated or a eastern cougar that clawed it’s way back into existence I would tend to lean towards the latter.

  7. AC says:

    Have seen photos from a friend in West Milford displaying a mountain lion crossing the road clear as day.

  8. Kevin Wilson says:

    I have seen a very large cat that I do believe was a dark haired puma type of animal. It was not the honey color of a common mountain lion. It had a dark coat that looked as though it rolled in a dusty patch. It had a very long thick tail that seemed to be as long, or almost as long, as the body of the animal.

    I was in West Cornwall, CT. I was driving to the transfer station on a Sunday morning. I noticed an elderly man waving his hands frantically to the driver side of a car off the side of a country road. I stopped because I thought he needed help. When I pulled over and asked him he pointed to the woods just across the street and said “ca..caa…cat!” I wasn’t sure if he hit a cat w his car or what, but when I crossed and looked into the forest a very clear sight of a large black/dark brown cat was just feet away from me. I had a very clear sighting and watched it for a few seconds. I did not pursue the animal but instead went back to the elderly man and confirmed our sighting. He had been asking his wife who was driving for the camera when I saw him waving his hands. I went on my way to the dump and was on cloud 9 for days. I know, for a fact, these animals are able to sustain themselves. I saw it. It’s like January 6, when trump tried to overthrow our government. One can’t unsee it!
    The year might have been 2010-11 ish.. It turns out, according to The Cornwall Chronicle, a local newsletter/paper, several sightings had been reported in that same area. However, the local wildlife and environmental authorities offered that “the animal could not be there because there was no road kill, to suggest otherwise”.

  9. Ian McCleary says:

    I would like to see the mountain lion in NJ. I think the Delaware Water Gap would be a great place for it to find food and elsewhere. There are lots of deer in this state and that theory sounds very likely to bring them out here in the distant future. Thank you for this article. It was fun to read. It’s a pity Bobcats are still so vulnerable to vehicle strikes in this state. I would like to see one too.

  10. JayKaze says:

    I am a hunter and fisherman. I was in Boonton Twp, NJ and a Mountain Lion took a deer down on valley road. I know the difference between a bobcat and mountain lion. So yes NJ does have Mountain Lions.

  11. Louis Pupo says:

    I saw a cougar on my property 8 to 9 yrs ago. Not a bobcat. I know the difference.
    I live on a farm. I had a flock of over 40 geese that dwindled to zero within 2 weeks. Saw the cougar only once. No tracks no feathers or dead bodies or body parts.

  12. Susan Wetzel says:

    I live in Sussex County NJ. I saw a mountain lion just before dusk back in the early 2000’s. I have seen many bob cats, but this was much larger and had a longer tail. The animal was racing across a small field in full view of the road I was on, then disappeared into the tree line.
    They used to say we didn’t have Fisher Cats either, but I’ve seen more than one of those!

  13. Denise Louise Ferrara says:

    Oh & ps. These photos of the Cougars sighted All have Long TAILS!

  14. Denise Ferrara says:

    It’s about time we take a seriously debated look into the MANY RECENT reports & recorded sightings in South Jersey. Particularly in My home County of Camden. In My town Sicklerville especially, there have been as many as 15 or more photos taken by home owners security camera. My stepfather being one, purchased & built a custom home on 4 acres of land, where he plan on hunting in season the many deer he had seen on a few of his outside camera’s. But soon after his home was finished & they moved in, the deer moved OUT.. & One late night after weeks of not a single camera alert, To His Amazement “A large Cougar Came Into SIGHT OF THE CAMERA! & he has clear pictures, which SCARE THE LIFE OUT OF ME! lol & since then my husband has met several others w/photos who have come in car shopping near by @ The local Auto Mall where he works, & spends many hours talking to customers, & coincidentally, this topic has been coming up. Where He has met at least 4 people who live In Nice Developments in Sicklerville NJ & have THE PICTURES TO PROVE.