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Mountain lion P-22, is seen above in the Griffith Park area in November 2014. P-22 is not the cougar killed early Thursday, April 21, 2022, in a collision on the 405 Freeway in Brentwood. (National Park Service, via AP, File)
Mountain lion P-22, is seen above in the Griffith Park area in November 2014. P-22 is not the cougar killed early Thursday, April 21, 2022, in a collision on the 405 Freeway in Brentwood. (National Park Service, via AP, File)
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Famed Griffith Park mountain lion P-22 was captured Monday, Dec. 12 in the backyard of a Los Feliz home in Los Angeles, and state and federal wildlife experts plan to evaluate the big cat’s health in the wake of several recent attacks on pet dogs.

Wildlife experts confirmed the capture, and a resident posted photos of the tranquilized animal on social media, writing, “P22 was captured in our backyard. Some animal control guys told us ‘There’s a lion in your yard.’ They tranquilized him and took to LA Zoo for observation. Quite a day!”

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife and the National Park Service announced Thursday they planned to capture P-22 to evaluate his health and “determine the best next steps for the animal while also prioritizing the safety of surrounding communities.” .

The agencies stated that the cat “may be exhibiting signs of distress.”

 

  • P-22 is the 22nd puma identified by Santa Monica Mountains...

    P-22 is the 22nd puma identified by Santa Monica Mountains National Park Service biologists. He came to this urban-adjacent park and left his mother in the Topanga State Park in 2012, traveled 20 miles and crossed two freeways to choose his home in an 8-mile square. (Photo courtesy of the National Park Service)

  • Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area National Park Service biologists...

    Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area National Park Service biologists Joanne Moriarty and Jeff Sikich measure P-22’s incisors during his capture on March 27, 2014. He was treated for mange, a parasitic disease of the hair and skin. Blood tests later showed exposure to anti-coagulant rodenticides, commonly known as rat poison. Los Angeles and Mumbai, India are the world’s only megacities of 10 million-plus where large felines breed, hunt and maintain territory within urban boundaries. Long-term studies in both cities have examined how the big cats prowl through their urban jungles, and how people can best live alongside them. (National Park Service via AP)

  • Brendan Smith, a writer and actor, was inspired to make...

    Brendan Smith, a writer and actor, was inspired to make a documentary about P22, a mountain lion who calls Griffith Park its home, after spending hours in the park walking his dog Django in Los Angeles, on Wednesday, July 12, 2017. (Photo by Nick Agro, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Artist Corie Mattie, ‘LA Hope Dealer’ works on the “Peace,...

    Artist Corie Mattie, ‘LA Hope Dealer’ works on the “Peace, Love and P-22,” mural as part of the #SaveLACougars campaign. Mattie, who once spotted P-22 in her own yard, has a tattoo of P-22 on her leg, was well underway painting her 17-by-20 foot mural of P-22 on Monday at Hype Silver Lake on Monday, October 3, 2022. (Photo by Dean Musgrove, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

  • Steve Winter, who photographed mountain lion P-22 in front of...

    Steve Winter, who photographed mountain lion P-22 in front of the Hollywood Sign, is videoed by Sharon Guynup following a groundbreaking for a bridge over the 101 Freeway to allow mountain lions and other animals to move across the freeway, Friday, April 22, 2022, in Agoura Hills. (Photo by Michael Owen Baker, contributing photographer)

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“This is an unprecedented situation in which a mountain lion has continued to survive in such an urban setting,” according to the DFW statement. “As P-22 has aged, however, the challenges associated with living on an island of habitat seem to be increasing and scientists are noting a recent change in his behavior. This underscores the consequences of a lack of habitat connectivity for mountain lions and all wildlife.”

P-22 has made headlines in recent weeks for apparent attacks on a pair of dogs. The cat was blamed for killing a leashed dog in the Hollywood Hills and attacking another a week ago in the Silver Lake area.

The lion, one of many Southland-area cats being tracked by National Park Service researchers, has gained fame locally for his persistence and durability, successfully managing to cross both the San Diego (405) and Hollywood (101) freeways to reach his current roaming grounds in the Griffith Park area.

Known as the “Hollywood Cat,” P-22 has been the face of the NPS’ lion-tracking effort. His exploits have been documented in various media accounts, particularly for some of his more notable exploits — crossing a pair of freeways, hiding out under a Los Feliz home in a standoff that drew widespread media attention and even being named a suspect in the killing of a koala at the Los Angeles Zoo.

He is believed to be about 11 years old, making him the oldest cat in the NPS’ study of Southland lions. He was initially captured and outfitted with a tracking collar in 2012. At the time of his last capture, he weighed 123 pounds.

The city of Los Angeles is currently reviewing detailed plans to create a wildlife district, aiming to reduce overdevelopment in the Hollywood Hills and Santa Monica Mountains between Griffith Park and the 405 freeway, which is longtime mountain lion habitat including P-22’s.

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