Runner suffocated mountain lion 'in self-defense'

Runner suffocated mountain lion 'in self-defense'

A runner killed a mountain lion “in self-defense” after the animal attacked him along a trail in northern Colorado Monday afternoon, authorities said.

The unnamed man heard something behind him on the West Ridge Trail at Horsetooth Mountain Open Space in Fort Collins and was attacked as he turned around. The mountain lion lunged at him, biting his face and wrist, according to a press release from Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

The runner broke free from the cougar’s powerful maw and defended himself, killing the wild cat as a result. The man was then able to get himself to a local hospital, where he was treated for serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

“The runner did everything he could to save his life,” Mark Leslie, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s northeast regional manager, said in a statement Monday afternoon. “In the event of a lion attack you need to do anything in your power to fight back just as this gentleman did.”

The man is doing well “considering his ordeal,” a spokesperson from Colorado Parks & Wildlife said in a statement to ABC News.

Wildlife officials later located the body of a “juvenile mountain lion” on the trail near several of the runner’s possessions. The animal, estimated to be less than a year old, was taken to a lab for a necropsy. It tested negative for rabies.

After further investigation, including an examination of the cougar, wildlife officials determined that the man was able to suffocate the animal while defending himself.

Horsetooth closed its running trails in the wake of the attack. The trails reopened on Monday evening, but rangers shuttered them again Tuesday afternoon, according to a statement.

“We want to allow for a cooling off period before reopening Horsetooth Mountain Open Space,” Ken Brink Jr., manager for Larimer County’s Department of Natural Resources, said Tuesday. “We are approaching this situation with an abundance of caution for the safety of our visitors.

“We’ll reopen Horsetooth Mountain when we’ve had more time to assess mountain lion activity in the area with our partners at CPW,” he added.

Larimer County rangers are planning to reassess the situation on Friday.

Mountain lion attacks are “extremely rare” in Colorado, according to the statement, which noted that there had been fewer than 20 mountain lion-related injuries in the state since 1990.

“Mountain lion attacks are uncommon, but people should remember that they are recreating in lion habitat when they visit Horsetooth Mountain Open Space,” Steve Gibson, district manager for Larimer County’s Department of Natural Resources, said in a statement Tuesday.

Fewer than 20 people have died from cougar attacks in North America in more than 100 years. Mountain lions are quiet, solitary, elusive predators that typically avoid humans, but it’s important to remain alert if you’re in an area where they live, according to the press release from Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

If you do encounter a mountain lion, the Colorado Division of Wildlife offers these tips:

— Do not approach a lion, especially one that is feeding or with kittens. Most mountain lions will try to avoid a confrontation. Give them a way to escape.

— Stay calm when you come upon a lion. Talk calmly yet firmly to it. Move slowly and never turn your back on it.

— Stop or back away slowly, if you can do it safely. Running may stimulate a lion’s instinct to chase and attack. Face the lion and stand upright.

— Do all you can to appear larger. Raise your arms. Open your jacket if you’re wearing one. If you have small children with you, protect them by picking them up so they won’t panic and run.

— If the lion behaves aggressively, throw stones, branches or whatever you can get your hands on without crouching down or turning your back. Wave your arms slowly and speak firmly. What you want to do is convince the lion you are not prey and that you may in fact be a danger to the lion.

— Fight back if a lion attacks you. Lions have been driven away by prey that fights back. People have fought back with rocks, sticks, caps or jackets, garden tools and their bare hands successfully. Target sensitive areas like the eyes and nose. Remain standing or try to get back up.

ABC News’ Becky Perlow, Clayton Sandell and Jim Vojtech contributed to this report.

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