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brings a lot of. And you know all that. We discuss what residents may have been seeing and what breeding mountain lion pairs would mean for our ecosystem. And as the biologist who's gonna stand on this and if I'm going to say this is a proven picture I need to be able to stand on it so soundly and have the evidence so I going to go through it with a fine tooth comb kept picking pieces apart trying to answer these pieces. Using DNA and physical evidence, state environmental officials said they determined that the animal. You need you need either a really good photograph or you need you know fresh scat that can be sent to a lab out West that can they can be identified there. I don't see the hoaxes anymore at that level. And so. Anytime at any HP broad dot org or subscribe to our podcast search Apple podcasts Google Play or stitcher for an HP bar exchange. So it is possible to see male Mountain lions roam into the northeast - there was one hit by a car in CT a number of years back - but we don't have a breeding population of Mountain lions in New England. Sam Evans-Brown: Well this might be a good moment to talk about hoaxes. It's listed as population of least concern. I mean I that said I've lived out west for nine years. Good morning guys. And so maybe before I go to you recommend I ask you Patrick Tate is the standard too high. PublishedNovember 16, 2018 at 6:16 AM EST. WMUR NH Chronicle Mountain Lions in NH Part I and Part II. Its closest living relative is the cheetah. HOLDERNESS, N.H. (AP) Two of the known mountain lions in New Hampshire have spent their 15 years in close proximity to humans. Fear for others and those two polarizing opinions on the situation is what I believe brings out mystique and Sam you know I take kind of a long view on this. Rick van de Poll: Yes. Right. No that's a little bit outside the range. Deer Bear Moose Wolves Fisher Mountain Lions. Less successful males roam further. County road and all of a sudden a big cat jumps out of the woods over a stone wall stood in the middle of the dirt road as I rode towards it. Sam Evans-Brown has been working for New Hampshire Public Radio since 2010, when he began as a freelancer. So we're fixated on natural but there's other possibilities. Because I mean as we've heard in the past 10 minutes like there's there's some disagreement or at least some some vagueness about what an actual mountain lion should appear like in the wild assuming we can even get close enough.