P-64 ( – November 28, 2018) was a wild mountain lion who resided in the northern Santa Monica Mountains, Simi Hills, and Santa Susana Mountains near Los Angeles, California. P-64 was first captured in February 2018, was monitored by a GPS collar, and was the subject of media attention due to his ability to use a culvert to cross U.S. 101, for which he was given the nickname Culvert Cat, and for his death after the Woolsey Fire.
For the next nine months, P-64 was tracked throughout the northern Santa Monica Mountains, Simi Hills, and Santa Susana Mountains, from south of U.S. 101 to north of S.R. 118. He crossed these freeways a combined 41 times and was only the fifth mountain lion documented to cross U.S. 101 and the second to cross from north to south. P-64 used a culvert near Liberty Canyon to cross U.S. 101, giving him the nickname "Culvert Cat".
P-64 was one of eleven or thirteen mountain lions tracked near the Woolsey Fire when it broke out on November 8, 2018. P-64 traveled for several miles through the burn area, at one point having the opportunity to escape but electing not to, a decision researchers believe was due to his desire to avoid firefighting and urbanization. He eventually settled in a remote area.
P-64 was tracked in an unburned section on November 26, giving researchers hope for his survival, but his tracker stopped transmitting on November 28 and biologists discovered his dead body near this location five days later. He had burnt paws and appeared to have been dead for several days at the time of his discovery. His death was announced less than two weeks after P-74's, the only other tracked mountain lion to die in the fire.
P-64's death was reported as far as India. The National Park Service lists his cause of death as unknown, while other sources have starvation as the cause. Post-mortem testing revealed six anticoagulant commonly used in rat poison in his liver.
Through use of the culvert and other successful crossings, P-64 was the only mountain lion in the area that could repeatedly cross highways.
The Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing, meant to de-isolate the Santa Monica Mountains by connecting it over U.S. 101 to the Simi Hills, is currently being built near where P-64 crossed U.S. 101. When completed, it will be the largest wildlife crossing in the world.
Family
Culvert Cat
Significance
See also
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