Schools
SCCPSS: Oatland Island Wildlife Center Introducing Two New Cougar Cubs To Visitors This Week!
It has been over a year since Oatland Island Wildlife Center said good-bye to its beloved cougar Shanti. Over that time, a number of inq ...

2/23/2022
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It has been over a year since Oatland Island Wildlife Center said good-bye to its beloved cougar Shanti. Over that time, a number of inquiries have come from the Savannah community wondering when there would be another resident in the Cougar Crossing enclosure. We finally have an answer. Oatland Island is welcoming not one, but two, cougar cubs to the wildlife center and visitors can see them for the first time this week!
Part of the Oatland Island Wildlife Center's mission is “to model good conservation-minded behaviors and practices". Finding a cougar who needs a home is not an everyday feat. Center staff reached out to the zoological community to let them know that an enclosure was available and then it was a matter of time.
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In the fall of 2021, four cougar kittens were found in a backyard in Washington state. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife attempted to relocate the kittens and their mom, but the mother abandoned them.
After two days waiting for the mother to return, WDFW, in cooperation with the Oregon Zoo and the Memphis Zoo, intervened to retrieve the kittens, three boys and one girl. When a cougar, also known as a puma or mountain lion, is found orphaned or injured in the wild, a volunteer coordinator with the Association of Zoos & Aquariums (AZA) Puma Monitoring Program is contacted to help place the cub at an appropriate facility to care for them. These cubs were designated to be placed in the care of the Memphis Zoo.
Knowing the kittens would need around-the-clock care for feedings and playtime; and quick transport from Seattle to Memphis, FedEx offered to assist as a part of the company's FedEx Cares “Delivering for Good" initiative.
Shortly after their arrival in Memphis, Oatland Island Wildlife Center's Veterinarian, Dr. Lesley Mailler, received the call. She says, “The zoological community knew that we had lost our cougar due to illness in 2020 and that we had the facilities for a cougar on standby. They asked if we were interested in taking one of the brothers and the sister. I replied, 'Of course we would!' We have missed having Shanti and are excited to see life brought back to the Cougar Crossing exhibit again."
After OIWC was contacted in November 2021, permits were filed to receive the two cubs. As soon as the permits were authorized, two Oatland staff members drove to Memphis to meet all four cubs and the amazing team that had been taking care of them. The new additions arrived safely to Oatland Island Wildlife Center on December 16, 2021, when they were placed in quarantine as is required of all new Oatland residents. Oatland would like to thank Karen Meeks of White Oak Conservation for helping to facilitate the acquisition.
This press release was produced by Savannah-Chatham County Public School System. The views expressed here are the author’s own.