June 22, 2012

The Mountain Lion


Mountain Lion   Photo Courtesy Fish and Game
The Mountain Lion
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist, Santa Monica Mirror
June 22, 2012

 A young mountain lion was shot and killed in Santa Monica on May 22, 2012.  It was hard to believe he was on 2nd Street.  What happened to bring him here?  Did the authorities do what they had to do to protect public safety or could the mountain lion have been saved and safely relocated?

The Santa Monica Police Department, Fish and Game, and the National Park Service, among others, will be meeting on Monday, June 25 as part of an official investigation into the tragedy and to develop a protocol on the chance that this could happen again.

I am a regular hiker in the Santa Monica Mountains, but I don’t know very much about the mountain lions that call those mountains home.  So I turned to the scientists studying the mountain lions and want to share what I learned from them in the hope that it will help both us as a city and the mountain lions.

Seth Riley, Wildlife Ecologist, and Jeff Sikich, Biologist, are with the National Park Service and track and monitor mountain lion populations in the Santa Monica Mountains.  Riley said,  “We don’t know exactly how many mountain lions live adjacent to our urban area.  Currently five are radio collared and we are following them.  Two are in the Santa Monica Mountains; two are in the Santa Susana Mountains.  And one, known as P-22, is in Griffith Park.  We expect he will stay there, without causing any problems, and will not leave until he goes looking for a female mountain lion.”  

The original range of the mountain lions, also called pumas, cougars and in Florida, panthers, was from South America to Canada and from coast to coast in the United States.

Except for the Florida panthers, who were declining due to a lack of genetic diversity but are coming back due to conservation actions, these animals no longer exist east of the Rockies.  They were eliminated in years past by hunters, ranchers, and farmers.  A law banning hunting of mountain lions was not passed in California until 1990. 

“Because mountain lions need so much space they are among the first animals to be affected by urbanization and habitat fragmentation,” said Riley.

The range of an adult male mountain lion is about 300 square kilometers.  They are solitary animals.  The adult female mountain lion keeps her kittens with her until they are 1 or 1½ and needs a range of about 100 square kilometers. This allows enough room to have sufficient prey to hunt.  They eat mostly deer.

The area of the Santa Monica Mountains totals approximately 650 square kilometers and could support a population of up to 6 to 8 mountain lions.  Not enough to be genetically or demographically viable.

The Mountain Lion Project of the National Park Service began in the Santa Monica Mountains in 2002 as an outgrowth of The Carnivore Study in the Santa Monica Mountains, done by Ray Sauvagot.  Riley and Sauvagot were both graduate students at UC Davis and Riley sees “Davis as having one of the best programs in ecology anywhere and especially in the United States where urban ecology is a relatively young field.”

Since 2002 Riley and Sikich have radio tagged 22 mountain lions.  The goals of the Project are to study the mountain lions, their behavior, their habitat, threats to mountain lions, and to propose solutions to protect the future of the mountain lions.

Of the 22 mountain lions identified over the last decade they are still tracking five. Some died of natural causes.  One of the mountain lions was on the 405 freeway and was hit by a car and one, known as P-9, was hit by a car in Malibu Canyon.  But the most common source of mortality comes from fights between male lions over scarce territory. 

The original mountain lion in the study, P-1, was tagged in 2002.  They lost contact with him in 2009 when his collar came off in a fight.  The scientists went to the site where the collar came off and typed the blood they found, which enabled them to establish P-1's identity.  They know he survived as they found his scat later in 2009.

 Urbanization creates problems for the mountain lions as development cuts off their access to natural pathways.  When built, the 101 freeway, the 118 freeway and the 126 freeway blocked the natural movement of the mountain lions.  At the time, it seemed, no one was thinking about the effects on wildlife of building freeways.  As development tends to follow freeways the habitat area for mountain lions was reduced on both sides of the freeway.  And the freeways were themselves barriers.

The natural pathways that connected the animals to the Simi Valley, to the Santa Susana Mountains and even to Los Padres National Forest, which goes all the way to Big Sur, were no longer available for the mountain lions. 

With young males, who start to become independent at about 1½ trying to find their own territory and with more adult males competing for the same range, existence became more difficult for the mountain lions.

As part of the study the mountain lions are tranquilized and given radio collars. Riley and Sikich bait a cage with deer meat, the preferred diet of the mountain lion.  When the mountain lion is inside the cage they can get right up next to the animal and use a blowgun to shoot a tranquilizing dart.  The dart can also be administered from a distance using a special rifle.

The mountain lions are anesthetized with ketamine, which causes disassociation, and medetomidine, which is an analgesic.  They use a blowpipe – a long tube with a dart containing the medications.  Dosage is administered in direct proportion to weight.  Generally four or five minutes elapse from when the dart is administered to the mountain lion being tranquilized.  It could take longer in a different environment.  Once tranquilized, the mountain lions are out for 45 – 60 minutes and then the effects wear off completely.

Riley said, “None of the animals we have radio tracked has ever behaved aggressively toward people.  The Griffith park mountain lion is in a natural area doing his natural thing and being monitored.  If we saw a change in his behavior our response would change.

"Attacks against people are rare."  Riley says, “Clearly the mountain lions don’t consider people to be prey.  They are right next to us and yet they are elusive and run away.”

However there have been serious and deadly attacks, one in 2004 in Orange County where a mountain biker was killed. 

Riley’s advice is:  “Be aware that mountain lions are around, although it is incredibly unusual to encounter one.  They know we’re here and they are elusive and keep away from us.  If you do encounter one, stand tall, make yourself look as big as possible, make a lot of loud noise, don’t turn and run, back away slowly and deliberately. Don’t act like a deer!  Don’t run as if you were the prey.  Remember, they want to get away from you.”

The National Park Service was created on August 25, 1916 by President Woodrow Wilson “to promote and regulate the use of Federal areas known as national parks, monuments and reservations . . . by such means and measures as conform to the fundamental purpose of the said parks, monuments and reservations, which purpose is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."

In 2012 don’t we have the same mission?





links
http://www.urbancarnivores.com/
Http://www.nps.gov/samo/index.htm
http://www.scwildlands.org/index.aspx




June 8, 2012

Doug Liman: Reckoning With Torture



Director Doug Liman
Photo Courtesy Hypnotic Productions

Doug Liman:  Reckoning With Torture       
SUSAN CLOKE
Columnist, Santa Monica Mirror
June 8, 2012

Doug Liman, the Director of the Bourne Identity, Swingers, and Mr. and Mrs. Smith, is directing a film about torture, specifically government-sanctioned torture.
He and I talked about making the film, Reckoning With Torture.  Here is what he said about the film, how he decided to make a film about torture, and his thoughts on American values.

SC.         When you think about making this film what do you hope for?
DL.         I am a perpetual optimist.  You can’t be in the film business unless you are and I have great hopes for the change film can provoke.
         I’m not naïve and I know the odds are against us.  But they’ve been against every film I’ve ever made.

SC.           When did you first start to become aware of American use of torture?
DL.         It wasn’t that long after 9/11 that I started seeing the horrible events of that day being exploited by our government and I became aware that our government was crossing lines that, in my memory, it had not.
I’m a commercial filmmaker and I spend most of my time putting together Hollywood style films.  When 9/11 happened, I was making the Bourne Identity.  During the Iraq war I was making the OC.

SC.         Do you remember a specific incident or moment in time when the issue of torture became something you felt you couldn’t ignore?
DL.         Even though I mostly worry about wondering if I can get a particular actor to cut his back end and even though I wasn’t looking for trouble, the photos and the information from Abu Ghraib were hard to ignore.
For me, like most Americans, once Abu Ghraib, the mistreatment and even torture of prisoners by American soldiers got your attention it was hard to ignore.  And when you realized that this was not just a couple of bad apples going against the rule of law, this was institutional policy, I couldn’t escape knowing that this was not consistent with the values I associate with being an American.

SC.         There is a big divide in American thinking on the use of torture.  Many will argue that we have no choice.  We have to protect ourselves.  It is a question of public safety.  Many will argue that it is against the principles of America, its values and its laws. 
DL.         I don’t come from national security work, so I don’t know if torture works.  What I do know is that people who work in National Security say it doesn’t.  It would be a more complicated issue if it did.  If we had to argue the morality of hurting someone in the hope that you might get information that would help save someone else we might be having a different discussion.  But since it doesn’t and the people, whose job is security, consistently confirm that it doesn’t, then the people who are pro torture are coming from a place of ignorance.

SC.         Was learning about Abu Ghraib the genesis of the idea to make the film?
DL.         What happened was that, like most Americans, I might be outraged, but had my own life to think about.   When I was making Fair Game, I ended up in a meeting at the ACLU and they showed me some of the documents they had obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, documents written by the American government.
Those documents described, very specifically, torture practices – a “How To Manual” – and they were distributed to detention facilities under U.S. control.  They condoned and institutionalized the practice of torture.
If you believe in the rule of law you should not do this.  The United States is signatory to the Geneva Conventions and the actions at Abu Ghraib and all acts of torture are against International Law.
It would be very hard to read documents created during the second Bush Administration and to learn what it was the country was doing and be okay with it.

SC.         Why are the documents so compelling?
DL.         These are not biased reports.  Consisting of 1000’s of pages, for the most part the documents consist of internal memos and reports of internal investigations.  Reports and investigations that were initiated because people within the Justice Department, the CIA, the Department of Defense, and the NSA saw actions that they believed to be wrong and outside the law and they wanted these actions investigated and stopped.
Thankfully, we have these documents.  It’s hard to imagine any other place where these damning documents would be released. 

SC.         What is the idea behind the film, Reckoning With Torture?
DL.         The Freedom of Information Act works. It allows us to heal ourselves.  Justice hasn’t been done yet.  There has been no punishment, no restitution, we haven’t reckoned yet with the atrocities committed.  But there is a mechanism that creates healing and we need to acknowledge it.
Any parent knows that when a kid does something wrong it has to be acknowledged to be truly over. 
The same is true on a large, public scale.  This was shown in South Africa with the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions.

SC.         How do we heal the division in American thought on the use of torture?
DL.         The first step is to show it is not a political issue, not an issue to take sides on, it is an issue of what it means to be an American.
We live in such a polarized world that we can’t separate the storyteller from the story.  If  Robert Redford is reading a torture memo verbatim people who don’t want to believe it will dismiss it as the ramblings of a left wing Hollywood movie star.
The only way to get past this is for people to read the documents for themselves.  To hear many, many Americans reading the documents is so moving.

SC.         I understand that is exactly what you plan to do.  You have made the documents available for people to read aloud, to make videos of the readings, and to send them to you to be used in the film.  What are you doing to get readings from people?
DL.         We have a website. http://reckoningwithtorture.org/   Any one can go on the website, pick a declassified document from among the documents we have posted on the website, make a video of themselves reading, and send it to us.  It’s all on the website – what to do and how to do it.  Any one with a cell phone can do this, and that’s just about everyone in the U.S.
We have gotten tons of responses so far and we will continue to gather more material during the summer and then begin editing in the fall.

SC.         How will you choose which videos to use?
DL.         I am so moved by the idea that people will take the time to be part of this film.  My goal is, through good editing, to use everybody who sends in a video.

SC.         Is it your hope this will change how Americans are seen in other parts of the world?
DL.         I travel a lot for work and even when the U.S. was at an all time moral low in world wide public perception, people would still come up to me and say that while they didn’t agree with the American government’s actions they loved the American people. 
Having said that, there is something amazing about a project that allows Americans to apologize, to say, “I don’t condone this.”  I think it will be amazing for the people who make the videos and amazing for the people, all over the world, who will watch this.
I make Hollywood movies and so I’m always looking for good endings.

SC.         Does this work make you feel close to your parents, and especially to your father, Arthur Liman, who was well known for his work at the Senate Iran-Contra Hearings.
DL.          I feel like my dad and my mother were both great role models for civic responsibility.  I’m not limited by the examples of my parents but they factor in.  My father believed so strongly in public service but he also loved my movies.

SC.         I think the idea for this film of many, many Americans reading from the documents and the concept of healing through acknowledging the truth is brilliant.  Kudos to you for your work.


 LINKS

Reckoning with Torture website
http://reckoningwithtorture.org/

Reckoning with Torture: Sundance Film Festival
January 29, 2011 | Sundance Film Festival | Park City, Utah
http://www.pen.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/5542/prmID/172


ACLU documents released under the FOIA
http://www.aclu.org/accountability/released.html

US. Department of Justice Freedom of Information Act http://www.justice.gov/oip/foia_updates/Vol_XVII_4/page2.htm

Truth and Reconciliation Commission
http://www.justice.gov.za/trc/

http://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/18/nyregion/arthur-l-liman-a-masterly-lawyer-dies-at-64.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm