Tracking the Elusive Lynx
Rare and maddeningly elusive, the "ghost cat" tries to give scientists the slip high in the mountains of Montana
- By Abigail Tucker
- Photographs by Ted Wood
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2011, Subscribe
In the Garnet Mountains of Montana, the lynx is the king of winter. Grizzlies, which rule the wilderness all summer, are asleep. Mountain lions, which sometimes crush lynx skulls out of spite, have followed the deer and elk down into the foothills. But the lynx—with its ultralight frame and tremendous webbed feet—can tread on top of the six-foot snowpack and pursue its singular passion: snowshoe hares, prey that constitutes 96 percent of its winter diet.
Which is why a frozen white bunny is lashed to the back of one of our snowmobiles, alongside a deer leg sporting a dainty black hoof. The bright yellow Bombardier Ski-Doos look shocking against the hushed backdrop of snow, shadows and evergreens. Lynx (Lynx canadensis) live on the slopes of these mountains, a part of the Rockies, and the machines are our ticket up. We slide and grind on a winding trail through a forest shaggy with lichen; a bald eagle wheels above, and the piney air is so pure and cold it hurts my nose. “Lean into the mountain,” advises John Squires, the leader of the U.S. Forest Service’s lynx study at the Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula. I gladly oblige, as this means leaning away from the sheer cliff on our other side.
The chances that we’ll trap and collar a lynx today are slim. The ghost cats are incredibly scarce in the continental United States, the southern extent of their range. Luckily for Squires and his field technicians, the cats are also helplessly curious. The study’s secret weapon is a trick borrowed from old-time trappers, who hung mirrors from tree branches to attract lynx. The scientists use shiny blank CDs instead, dabbed with beaver scent and suspended with fishing line near chicken-wire traps. The discs are like lynx disco balls, glittering and irresistible, drawing the cats in for a closer look. Scientists also hang grouse wings, which the lynx swat with their mammoth paws, shredding them like flimsy pet store toys.
If a lynx is enticed into a trap, the door falls and the animal is left to gnaw the bunny bait, chew the snow packed in the corners and contemplate its folly until the scientists arrive. The lynx is then injected with a sedative from a needle attached to a pole, wrapped in a sleeping bag with plenty of Hot Hands (packets of chemicals that heat up when exposed to the air), pricked for a blood sample that will yield DNA, weighed and measured and, most important, collared with a GPS device and VHF radio transmitter that will record its location every half-hour. “We let the lynx tell us where they go,” Squires says. They’ve trapped 140 animals over the years—84 males and 56 females, which are shrewder and harder to capture yet more essential to the project, because they lead the scientists to springtime dens.
As we career up Elevation Mountain, Squires nods at signs in the snow: grouse tracks, footprints of hares. He stops when he comes to a long cat track.
“Mountain lion,” he says after a moment. It’s only the second time he’s seen the lynx’s great enemy this high up in late winter. But the weather has been warm and the snow is only half its usual depth, allowing the lions to infiltrate. “That’s a bad deal for the lynx,” he says.
The lynx themselves are nowhere to be found. Trap after trap is empty, the bait nibbled by weasels too light to trip the mechanism. Deer fur from old bait is scattered like gray confetti on the ground.
Finally, in the last trap in the series, something stirs—we can see it from the trail. Megan Kosterman and Scott Eggeman, technicians on the project, trudge off to investigate, and Kosterman flashes a triumphant thumbs up. But then she returns with bad news. “It’s just M-120,” she says, disgusted. M-120—beefy, audacious and apparently smart enough to spot a free lunch—is perhaps the world’s least elusive lynx: the scientists catch him several times a year.
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Related topics: Carnivores Hunting Montana Mountains
Additional Sources
"Ghost Cat: a historic land deal will protect forests for the rare Canada lynx—if researchers can find it," Scott McMillion, Nature Conservancy Magazine, Winter 2009
"Movements of a Male Canada Lynx Crossing the Greater Yellowstone Area, Including Highways," John R. Squires and Robert Oakleaf, Northwest Science Notes, 2005
"Winter Prey Selection of Canada Lynx in Northwestern Montana," John R. Squires and Leonard F. Ruggiero, Journal of Wildlife Management, April 2007
"Characteristics of an unharvested lynx population during a snowshoe hare decline," Kim G. Poole, Journal of Wildlife Management, October 1994









Comments (7)
Tina, While not a researcher I know much data can be learned from observation, viewing, photography, scat analysis, interviewing locals and hunters, autopsies, and if adventurous enough with software modeling. The idea that two thirds of the animals being tracked died should in itself tell an ethical person to stop. How many of these deaths were the result of a drugged animal with a noose around it's neck running into traffic, or too disoriented and distracted to find food. If "a dedicated researcher without traps and radio collars would be lucky to see one lynx in ten years," and I've seen fifty without trying, can I get paid for my insight? To me this approach is akin to thinking people die from hypothermia, let's throw some in the ice water and collect the data as they suffer and die, then we'll know what to do. These animals do not require rocket science, if you want to help them help the local rabbits, if you want to help the rabbits, plant some grass. Common sense is lacking here. Alan Strech
Posted by Alan Strech on November 5,2012 | 06:46 PM
Alan Strech, you have no idea what you're talking about. "A multitude of other ways to get the data"? Name three. Name one. A dedicated researcher without traps and radio collars would be lucky to see one lynx in ten years. This animal can range over hundreds of square miles of rugged mountains, and leaves tracks only in snow, often deep snow. Want to try tracking one without a collar? You first! "Of the animals that died while Squires was tracking them, about a third perished from human-related causes, such as poaching or vehicle collisions; another third were killed by other animals (mostly mountain lions); and the rest starved." Now tell me how to get information like that without radio collars-- which are not "permanent nooses" but are sized so the animal can follow its normal routine and are generally designed to fall off after a certain time. The trapping is done with as little disruption to the animals as possible. The information gained is often critical to their conservation and survival, as is stated clearly in this article. If you have any better ideas, your nearest university department of wildlife conservation would like to hear them.
Posted by Tina Rhea on March 22,2012 | 06:04 PM
"Snow Phantom" was an interesting read. In our neighborhood we have 3 or 4 of their brethren, bobcats (Lynx rufus), which we welcome. What we don't do is pursue them with snowmobiles, bait them, trap them, drug them and tie transmitters to their necks. One can only imagine the horror of a wild animal waking up in and from a drugged state with a permanent noose around their neck. Where I'm from we shun people who torture animals, not revere them. There are a multitude of other ways to get the data that is neither lazy nor cruel. Shame on them.
Posted by Alan Strech on February 22,2011 | 10:05 PM
well, im gonna have a nice discussion tomorrow about this.I could understand this text well...
Posted by luiz on February 21,2011 | 06:10 PM
Dear Ms. Tucker,
This is a wonderful story and I loved the photographs of the lynx. I just have one criticism; I saw the same photographs (and read essentially the same story, with only a slightly different text) a few months ago while waiting in the dentist's office in Nature Conservancy Magazine.
I would have preferred, if you're publishing the same story twice, to have some different pictures to go with the slightly different text.
all the best,
Grayson Hugh
Posted by Grayson Hugh on February 2,2011 | 07:34 PM
Hi
Interesting article on the linx. It was mentioned that the lynx can bare young at a very early age, one year I believe.
Could it be that the diet of the lynx, which is exclusively rabbits may have something to do with this early onset of the ability to become pregnant? I believe that rabbits are able to not only pregnant at less than a year, but that they also can have overlapping pregnancies.
I feel that the lynx ingesting so many rabbits in its lifetime over countless generations have become linked to the hormonal balances and influences of the rabbit and have inadvertently become physically adapted to the hormonal cycles of the rabbit.
Posted by Amphibian. on January 28,2011 | 07:58 PM
Ms. Tucker: While you followed the team on the track of the lynx, you carried us along--not only through the anecdotal asides, but with sentences so deftly written they operated like hidden cameras. You kept us in the world with your words. If that piece does not win honors--such as republication in America's Best Essays--the judges should hang their heads like the guy who found nothing in those cages. Well done.
Posted by Mike Robinson on January 22,2011 | 10:16 AM