Possible cougar DNA samples collected since 2003 to finally be tested - Action News
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New Brunswick

Possible cougar DNA samples collected since 2003 to finally be tested

A backlog at a University of Montreal labs means the possible evidence of cougars in New Brunswick has been locked away in a storage room for more than a decade.

Hair and scat samples have been sitting in storage for years and are now coming back to N.B. for DNA analysis

Several samples of possible cougar DNA will finally be tested in N.B. after sitting in storage at a Montreal lab for years. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

A backlog at a University of Montreal labs means the possible evidence of cougars in New Brunswick hasbeen locked away in a storage room for more than a decade.

Samples of possible cougar hair and scat collected in New Brunswicksince 2003 stillhaven't been tested by a genomics lab in Montreal.

Thatleaves thepossibility that there is further proof ofcougarsin theprovince.

"In past years there have been personnel changes there, there have some delays, we actually have a backlog of five or six samples with them that have yet to be determined," said Donald McAlpine, the research curator head of zoology at the New Brunswick Museum.

"Theprobabilityis that these are not cougar, but we won't know for sure until we do thegeneticwork."

Thatbacklog ofsampleswill be returned to the provinceforexaminationat a new genomics lab at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John.

"It's terrific that we can do this now," saidMcAlpine.

Donald McAlpine, research curator head of zoology at the New Brunswick Museum says samples are probably not from cougars but researchers won't know for sure until they are tested. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
He said the museum willhave those samples back in a couple of weeks and they also have a new sample from Sussex following a vehicle collision with a possible cougar.

"So in a month or so we'll be able to have those samples tested and find outwhetheror not those are in fact cougar," said McAlpine.

A cougar mount atthe NewBrunswickMuseum dating back to the 1930s that was supposedly shot in Quebeccould also undergo DNA testingto explore its geneticorigins.

"It will be interesting to see where that one came from," said McAlpine.

The question of cougars in New Brunswick has always been the source of controversy with manyreported sightings, but littleevidenceto back them up.

Several households near Tracy have reported hearing and seeing a large cougar on their properties as recently as Oct 17.

"If they get a picture they'll be the first ones to ever do so in New Brunswickhistory," said McAlpine.

New lab, new possibilities

Scott Pavey, Canada research chair in aquatic molecular ecology and ecological genomics, said the new University of New Brunswick in Saint John genomics lab will be able to identify any species. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
"About two weeks and we'll be able to tell definitively if they came from a cougar," saidScott Pavey, a Canada research chair inaquatic molecular ecology and ecological genomics.

"One of the neat applications that a geonomics lab can do is identify species, any species, using DNA."

The lab located in theCanadian Rivers Institute building on campus has been open for around four months.

Pavey saidthe new lab willbenefit the province in ways beyond solving the question of cougars.

"It's a lot easier to work with local problems and local people like those the New Brunswick Museum or the Department of Fisheries and Oceans," said Pavey.

"I have a vestedinterestin working with local people and local issues that you wouldn't necessarily get from a lab in Montreal or Toronto."

Not the Wild Variety

Cougars have long been rumoured to be in New Brunswick forests, but there has been little evidence to back up sightings, save for two DNA samples collected in 2003. (Shane Fowler/CBC)
Despite thepossibilityofconfirmed cougars in the province, chances are they have not come to New Brunswick on their own accord.

"We've gotten hundreds, perhaps thousands of reports of sightings," said McAlpine.

"But with the exception oftwo, there's been no way to verify those."

There have beena pair ofconfirmed cases of cougar DNA in the province's history.

In 2003, "scratchposts"set up inFundyNational Park, stations designed to lure cougars,produced two genetic samples that tested positive for cougar DNA.

One of those samples was from apopulationfound inSouth America.