A mountain lion hisses after being captured in a Morgan Hill

GILROY
– Veteran fish and game warden Henry Coletto has been rehired by
the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, this time as its mountain
lion expert.
GILROY – Veteran fish and game warden Henry Coletto has been rehired by the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, this time as its mountain lion expert.

The formerly retired woodsman’s new part-time job is to map lion sightings, investigate unusual ones, get all county agencies to use the same system for reporting lions and train police and animal control officers around the county how best to deal with the big cats.

Coletto, 61, spent 37 years as this county’s fish and game warden: 22 years with the Parks Department and the last 15 with the Sheriff’s Office. He took his planned retirement in April 2003.

During his long career, he got to know the habits of mountain lions – also known as cougars or pumas – roaming the Santa Cruz and Diablo ranges that frame the county.

With swelling suburbs abutting wild hills, Coletto says the Santa Clara Valley may be poised for its first lion attack on a human in 95 years. The cats almost always avoid people, and there have been only 15 lion attack victims in state history, but special circumstances – such as a starving or rabid animal or human provocation – could lead to violence. Of those 15, three were this year.

After a year with no lion expert on staff, Sheriff Laurie Smith offered Coletto the job in April, thinking the education he could offer police and the public would go a long way toward preventing or mitigating future attacks, according to department spokesman Terrance Helm.

“We’re building our homes in the habitat of mountain lions,” Helm said. “It would be irresponsible of the sheriff not to protect the citizens. … By bringing Henry back, she’s protecting the mountain lions as well as the citizens.”

“The mountain lions are already knocking at the door,” Helm added. “They’re coming into our neighborhoods. They’re attacking our domestic animals. They’re attacking in other areas; they just haven’t attacked here.”

Panic over the animals makes situations worse, Coletto said. He advises people to keep doing whatever they do, but to be cautious if they see lions.

“The bottom line with these things is you’ve got to keep perspective,” Coletto said. “If lions wanted to eat people, they’d be eating people once a week.”

About 20 to 30 mountain lions live in Santa Clara County, according to warden John Nores of the state Department of Fish and Game. Despite public paranoia, there has been only one mountain lion attack in this county’s recorded history, when a rabid cat attacked a Morgan Hill Sunday school class in 1909. The lion attacked one young student and his teacher, who fought off the beast with a hat pin. Both later died of rabies.

Coletto started his six-month renewable contract in May, around the time Palo Alto police shot and killed a cougar in a neighborhood tree. Many said the officers were too harsh in killing the animal instead of tranquilizing it.

In Morgan Hill on March 9, police shot and killed one of three mountain lion cubs after it became aggressive and tried to enter a house through a sliding glass door. Tranquilizing darts which worked on one of the cubs had no effect on the one police shot. The third cub was killed by a passing vehicle.

Mountain lions are seen periodically in Gilroy, especially in the southern and western foothills and along Uvas Creek. Most recently, on July 8, a woman told police she saw one outside her Larkspur Lane home.

Coletto plans to lead training sessions for police, animal control and vector control (disease and nuisance wildlife) officers from around the county. He expects officers from San Mateo and Alameda counties to attend as well.

Coletto said officers facing a mountain lion in a neighborhood setting have three basic options:

• Wait for the cat to run off if a wild area is nearby.

• Tranquilize it to be released later in a wild habitat.

• Kill it.

Each choice has complications, he said. A tranquilizing dart, seen by many as a humane but practical solution, can take 15 to 25 minutes to knock out a lion, during which time the lion can still cause problems.

Deciding what to do is hard, but Coletto wants police officers to know they shouldn’t make the decision alone. They are required to notify the state Fish and Game Department of any mountain lion sighting, and if time permits, a state game warden should take part on the decision of how to handle the animal. Part of Coletto’s job is to make sure all police officers have access to the phone numbers of who to call if they encounter a lion.

In the Palo Alto case, Coletto said the state warden gave police a green light to handle the situation as they saw fit.

Killing a problem lion is a different matter for police than killing a nuisance coyote. Since 1990, mountain lions have been protected by law from hunting, and state permits are needed to kill them.

In June, an emaciated mountain lion injured a woman in Sequoia National Park, making her the 15th lion attack victim in recorded California history. Six of those 15 died as a result of the attacks, the most recent in January in Orange County.

Coletto said he is willing to speak to groups about mountain lions and invites anyone who has mountain lion questions to call him at 847-7504.

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