Every spring, the boardwalk at 爆料公社鈥檚 in the Florida Everglades, just north of Naples, is a fantastic place , like nesting Wood Storks, Roseate Spoonbills, and all types of herons and egrets. It鈥檚 not, however, where you鈥檇 expect to get run over by an endangered Florida panther.
Yet on the morning of March 28, that鈥檚 exactly what happened when Tina Dorschel, a visitor from Wisconsin, had with a panther. She caught the skittish feline on camera for about 14 seconds as it scrambled past her on the boardwalk. Meeting these wild cats is extremely uncommon, and Dorshel鈥檚 video has since gone viral. (Warning: The clip contains some rough language.)
On an early morning nature walk we saw a gator, a snake, frogs, pretty birds, and had this unexpected encounter. (Warning...curse word at end!)
Posted by Tina Dorschel on Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Judging by this panther鈥檚 lack of scars or obvious identifying marks, 鈥渢his is definitely a young cat,鈥 probably around a three-year-old male, says the sanctuary's director Jason Lauritsen. It鈥檚 panther breeding season, so he thinks the animal was just traveling through, looking for his own territory. 鈥淐orkscrew isn鈥檛 his home,鈥 Lauritsen says.
The sanctuary鈥檚 dominant resident male, called Lefty, is forcing out the younger, smaller males from his range this time of the year. Each juvenile has to scout out new territory, usually spanning some 200 square miles in size. However, Lefty鈥檚 been absent from Corkscrew for a year now, and Lauristen believes that the other males are now working out the pecking order. Aggression between males is the second leading cause of Florida panther death, he says鈥攋ust behind accidental collisions with cars.
Over the past week, sanctuary staff have heard females calling and have seen several males meandering in and out of Corkscrew鈥檚 13,000 acres of pine flatwoods, wet prairie, and old-growth bald cypress forest. They鈥檝e actually seen a lot of the cats this season, perhaps due to increasing development in the area. 鈥淭his has been the most frequent year of panther sightings that I鈥檓 aware of,鈥 Lauritsen says.
While Corkscrew is indeed rich panther habitat, Lauritsen says that 鈥渋t鈥檚 not enough to sustain the entire Florida panther population,鈥 of which some 140 to 200 individuals remain. Photographer Ralph Arwood, who , has counted three resident cats this year, as well as two to six kittens and a couple of wandering juveniles.
To bolster numbers, conservation groups are helping landowners preserve forested pathways between habitats like Corkscrew to guide the panthers away from roadways and keep populations connected. One of these corridors, which bridges across the Caloosahatchee River to the north, could be a real game changer, Lauritsen says: 鈥淭his connection can create population resilience and safeguard panthers in the face of climate change.鈥
Unlike their domesticated, feral cousins, these cats don鈥檛 pick on the favored residents of 爆料公社鈥檚 sanctuary. 鈥淧anthers are eating mostly deer and wild hogs and occasionally a young alligator,鈥 Lauritsen says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not known for hunting birds.鈥 And since panthers rule the Everglades鈥 food chain, their presence speaks to the stability of the entire ecosystem. The run-in with this young male, however, reflects quite the opposite鈥攊t's a testament to the habitat that鈥檚 quickly shrinking around him.