In a parody of Camelot, I would encourage all to "Dream more impossible dreams and fight fewer unbeatable foes." Certainly we could think of some good reasons to provide a protected status to mountain lions in Iowa. But, an effort to protect them will likely only result in a blackened eye for those who propose it, or for the Sierra Club if it is done in its name. Unfortunately, there is a great and mostly irrational fear of predators, here and everywhere. Some counties in the southern tier of Iowa are considering bounties on mountain lions. I heard a presentation of the efforts to introduce the red wolf into the Lands Between the Lakes in Kentucky/Tennessee. At one of the meeting someone said they knew that wolves sneaked up to cribs and sucked the breath from babies. Predators are the "blame game" all over the country. In Alaska if you didn't get a moose to feed the family over the winter and had to settle for a caribou, you blamed the wolves. In Colorado and through much of the west coyotes are blamed for the demise of mule deer (when it is likely habitat destruction). In Kansas you go hunt coyotes because they are destroying the pheasant population (In reality, studies showed, the more coyotes-the more pheasant because coyotes eat skunks, raccoons, etc. that are the real predators of pheasant). We hear some of this same thing here in Iowa with coyotes and pheasant and rabbits. There is some justification for the fears of those who raise cattle and sheep as to the safety of their livelihood. They do kill some livestock. The politics of predators is intense. In Colorado the politically appointed head of their DNR spent 2 hours flying around in a small plane and stepped off on the runway and declared that, "Now, I can clearly see that coyotes are causing the decline of mule deer." The governor of Idaho simply drove down a highway in the Lochsa River Valley and declared that he could clearly see that the bears were causing the decline of elk by killing the calves. So, there the limit was increased to 2 bears per hunter. I have to say that I have driven that highway and hunted bears there. The forest is so thick that you can hardly see 25 yds into it from the highway. Politicians are going to want to do the people pleasing thing and not protect predators. So, I might encourage some to keep their powder dry and save their ammunition for an issue where they might be more effective. I would guess that those who say we haven't need the cougar in Iowa for the last 100 years will win the day. Lanny Schwartz - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp