Living where I do among
nearly 300,000 humans in the Sarasota- Bradenton area I remain amazed by the
relative abundance of wildlife that survives in this increasingly
concrete-choked landscape especially in areas west of Interstate highway 75. Since moving here in early 2009 I’ve found
river otters quite regularly (including too many road kills), nesting
swallow-tailed kites (the most beautiful raptor on earth), eastern diamondback
rattlesnakes, several cottonmouth’s (including one on my front step during a
torrential downpour), opossums, white-tailed deer and no shortage of
armadillos. The latter, almost all the time, are road-kills.
Probably the wildlife
species most closely associated with “wilderness” has been the bobcat. Before moving to Florida I had seen only
two bobcats in my lifetime. The first
was crossing the road not far from Clint Eastwood’s home (and his empty chair)
near Carmel, California in October 1980. The second was seen stalking a flock
of Gambel’s quail along the San Pedro River in southeast Arizona in May
1998. Since moving to Florida however I
have seen probably 20 more in the wild including one not far from my house in a
heavily urbanized area on January 24, 2013.
Location of the white-tailed deer and bobcat interaction this morning (left pin). The site lies just 0.78 miles from heavily traveled Interstate 75 (right pin) and two city blocks north of a major highway intersection. Click on the image to make it larger.
My most recent sighting of
this magnificent mammal occurred this morning while I was on my bicycle. As I pedaled down Honore Avenue and
approached the unnamed road that turns into the shopping mall where Staples is
located, I noticed a fawn white-tailed deer, perhaps no more than a month old, dash
across Honore (without looking for oncoming traffic) and disappear into the
thick woody vegetation behind the shopping mall. About 2 steps behind the fawn was a second one
(no doubt its twin) that was traveling at the same high rate of speed. Perhaps two seconds behind the second fawn was an
adult female white-tailed deer and what seemed like a nanosecond behind the adult
deer was an adult bobcat running full out in pursuit of a late morning
breakfast.
Once they passed I pedaled
to the place where they were seen entering the thick woody vegetation. There I saw white-tailed deer tracks and bobcat
tracks but nothing more. I waited a
minute to listen for the sounds of a kill but heard none. All I heard was a persistent male northern parula
and some northern mockingbirds mimicking everything they had ever heard.
Defenders of Wildlife information about bobcats states that they primarily eat lagomorphs but also
take birds, rodents and adult deer.
Early June is the time of
year when juvenile bobcats are still with the mother and are still fed by
her. My guess is that this animal was in pursuit of
the fawns not the adult because of the size of the fawns and because of their
vulnerability. Despite the reason
(and it doesn’t really matter anyway) it was exciting to see this
interaction. I only wish I could have
seen through the thick vegetation to determine if the bobcat was successful. Perhaps I’ll have a hunch if I see the female
deer again but next time she has with her only one fawn. Several recent studies have shown that
white-tailed deer fawn mortality rate (rate of deaths from birth until their
first birthday) ranged from 53 percent to 77 percent. Thus it’s likely that only one of those fawns
I saw this morning was going to live to blow out its birthday cake candle 10
months from now.
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