Canada Lynx

Description
The Canada lynx Lynx canadensis is
a beautiful wild felid, or cat, of the boreal forest, or northernmost forest
in the Northern Hemisphere. The lynx resembles a very large domestic cat.
It has a short tail, long legs, large feet, and prominent ear tufts. Its
winter coat is light grey and slightly mottled with long guard hairs; the
underfur is brownish, and the ear tufts and tip of the tail are black.
The summer coat is much shorter than the winter coat and has a definite
reddish brown cast.
Its large feet, which are covered
during winter by a dense growth of coarse hair, help the lynx to travel
over snow. The lynx, like the snowshoe hare, can spread its toes in soft
snow, expanding its "snowshoes" still farther.
The lynx has large eyes and ears and
depends on its acute sight and hearing when hunting. The lynx’s claws,
like those of most other cats, are retractable and used primarily for seizing
prey and fighting.
Of the three Canadian members of the
cat family (Felidae)—the lynx, the bobcat, and the cougar—the lynx and
the bobcat are most alike and are most closely related to each other. They
probably both descended from the larger Eurasian lynx. There are small
differences in appearance: on average, bobcats are slightly smaller; the
bobcat’s feet are not as large as those of the lynx, making the bobcat
less able to secure food in deep snow; the lynx’s tail has a solid black
tip, whereas that of the bobcat has three or four narrow black bars and
a black spot near the tip on its upper surface; and the bobcat’s fur has
more pronounced spotting. The cougar is much larger and more powerful than
either of them, and can be readily identified by its long tail.
Signs and sounds
The lynx has a variety of vocalizations,
like those made by house cats, but louder.
Habitat and habits
The lynx generally inhabits forested
wilderness areas. It favours old growth boreal forests with a dense undercover
of thickets and windfalls. However, this carnivore, or meat eater, will
populate other types of habitat as long as they contain minimal forest
cover and adequate numbers of prey, in particular snowshoe hares. Because
hare populations increase in forests that are growing back after disruption
by wildfires or logging operations, these regenerating forest ecosystems
are often able to support denser populations of lynxes as well.
As long as they are not disturbed,
lynxes are remarkably tolerant of human settlement. For example, since
the early 1960s, they have occupied the partly cleared mixed-farming district
near Rochester, in central Alberta. A few were shot in farmyards, but there
was no intensive fur trapping, and lynxes remain in the area.
The size of the home range varies
with numbers of lynxes and snowshoe hares in the area, available cover,
and season. When there are fewer hares, each lynx needs a larger area on
which to hunt. In summer, home ranges are larger than in winter. In Alberta,
lynx tracked in winter had home ranges varying from 15 to 47 km2. On Cape
Breton Island, a study that involved radio transmitters attached to adult
lynxes measured home ranges of 12 to 19 km2 in winter and 27 to 32 km2
in summer. In Canada, scientists have measured daily travelling distances
for lynxes ranging from less than a kilometre to 19 km.
The territoriality of these mammals
is still poorly understood. Home ranges may overlap, especially where the
lynx neighbours are of different ages and sexes. In general, the home ranges
of adults do not seem to overlap with other adults of the same sex. The
animals urinate frequently to mark their home range.
Periodically, there have been conspicuous
mass movements of lynxes out of the boreal forest and onto the prairie
grasslands. These were well known to early fur traders and trappers, but
they ceased in 1925–26. During 1962–63, however, there was once again a
notable movement out of the north. Lynxes entered large cities such as
Edmonton, Calgary, and Winnipeg; appeared on the open grasslands of southern
Alberta, Saskatchewan, and North Dakota; and reached Iowa and southwestern
Wisconsin. These same events were repeated during 1972–73. Like so many
other aspects of the natural history of the lynx, these movements can be
understood by relating them to the cyclical declines in populations of
the snowshoe hare, the lynx’s main prey. Lynx populations that increase
during periods of hare increase must either starve or emigrate when the
hares disappear. The absence of any obvious movement between 1925–26 and
1962–63 probably reflected unusually low numbers of lynxes.
Like the cougar and the bobcat, the
other two members of the cat family native to Canada, the Canada lynx tends
to be secretive and most active at night and, like them, it is rarely seen
in the wild. Even for trappers who have spent a lifetime in areas where
lynxes are common, encounters with these predators are rare and memorable.
Unique characteristics
The lynx preys almost exclusively
on the snowshoe hare. Since snowshoe hare populations follow a 10-year
cycle, lynx numbers also fluctuate dramatically, building to a peak as
hare populations increase, and then crashing. Scientists who have examined
the fur-trading records of the Hudson’s Bay Company have been able to trace
closely linked 10-year cycles of growth and decline in populations of the
two species over the past 200 years. Figure 1 shows the cyclic fluctuations
in the numbers of snowshoe hare and lynx pelts supplied to the company
over a 90-year period.
Range
The range of the lynx is essentially
that part of North America covered by boreal, or northernmost, forest and
occupied also by the snowshoe hare. Between 1900 and the mid-1950s, lynxes
became scarce in the southern portions of this range. This was probably
due to trapping during periods of snowshoe hare scarcity (low years in
the 10-year cycle). At these times lynx numbers are already low and fewer
young are surviving to adulthood, so trapping can seriously deplete, or
even eradicate, local populations. In the past 25 years, lynxes have reoccupied
some of this southern range, and this may be due to tighter legal restrictions
on trapping. The northern range expansion of the bobcat in the past century
may also have contributed to the overall decline in lynx numbers. When
both species compete for the same space and food resources, the lynx most
often yields to the more aggressive and adaptable bobcat.
Feeding
More than 75 percent of the lynx’s
diet in winter is snowshoe hares, and when they are abundant a lynx may
kill one hare every one or two days. In summer the lynx’s diet is more
varied. But even in summer hares remain the main prey, supplemented by
grouse, voles, mice, squirrels, and foxes. A hungry lynx will devour an
entire hare in one meal. It may also hide partially eaten prey to finish
later. When it is available, lynxes will also supplement their diet with
carrion, or dead flesh, from domestic livestock and/or big game animals,
such as deer, but they rarely attack large prey. An exception occurs on
the island of Newfoundland. After people introduced the snowshoe hare to
the island in the 1870s, lynxes began to prey on caribou calves when snowshoe
hares became scarce. In the 1960s, lynxes were killing so many calves that
wildlife managers removed many of the lynxes found on the calving grounds.
Today, the caribou population has increased to the point where lynx predation
is not considered a threat.
Lynxes hunt at night. They watch and
listen for prey, but they do not seem to track it by smell. Like all members
of the cat family, they move silently. Although excellent climbers, they
are seldom found in trees. Because they cannot run fast except over short
distances, they stalk or ambush their prey at close range. A common strategy
is to lie in wait beside the well-used trails, or runways, of the snowshoe
hare. Success usually depends on whether the lynx manages to capture the
hare at one bound—about 6.5 m or four hops for the hare.
Male lynxes hunt alone, except briefly
during the mating season. By autumn, females travel with their kittens,
the young learning to hunt, and the family group may stay together until
the breeding season, in late February or March. Family groups cooperate
to increase their hunting success. The mother and young often travel in
single file through habitat where hares are scarce, but will travel abreast
when hunting in habitat where hares are plentiful. A hare flushed, or forced
out of its hiding place, by one lynx may be caught by another.
Breeding
Mating occurs during February or March
each year, and the young (usually four) are born in April and May, 60 to
65 days later. Although the lynx seldom uses an underground den, young
may be born under brush piles or uprooted trees, or in hollow logs, which
provide shelter from rain and cold. The kittens, reared solely by the female,
look like those of the domestic cat. Female kits may breed for the first
time as they approach one year of age, but this depends on the abundance
and availability of snowshoe hares and the physical and nutritional condition
of the lynx.
Probably starvation following the
rapid cyclic declines in snowshoe hare populations is the greatest single
source of natural mortality among adult and yearling lynxes. About 40 percent
of the total lynx population may starve to death following a crash in the
snowshoe hare population. During the following three to four years, when
the hare population is starting to rebuild, lynxes breed, but the kittens
die before winter. This suggests that an adult female simply cannot support
both herself and her litter when hares are scarce.
Conservation
In Canada, trapping seems to be the
only important cause of death besides the decline of populations of the
lynx’s main prey, the snowshoe hare. Although the wolf is alleged to be
the chief natural enemy of the lynx in northern Europe, nothing is known
of lynx–wolf interactions in North America. The incidence of diseases,
such as rabies and distemper, among lynxes and their impact on populations
are also unknown.
Trapping is also the most important
influence of people on the lynx. The lynx is easily trapped, and when fur
prices rise, trappers take a larger proportion of the lynx population.
Intense trapping can remove most lynxes from a given area. Historically,
trapping has caused long-term changes in the size of the lynx population
in Canada. Lynx populations began to decline after 1900, and the decline
continued to the mid-1950s. At that time, garments made of long-haired
furs went out of fashion, there was a major depression in fur prices and
a decline in trapping, and the lynx population was able to recover. Since
the early 1970s, the demand for lynx pelts has risen steadily. The average
price paid per pelt went from about $30 in 1970 to peak in the mid-1980s
at over $500 per pelt. By 1990, it had fallen to $117.
Today, the lynx is trapped in all
provinces and territories except Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and
New Brunswick. Trapping is confined to regulated seasons, and wildlife
managers can vary the regulations as needed from year to year and among
districts within a province. Many jurisdictions have also placed restrictions
on the number of lynxes that may be killed. Some biologists have recommended
closing trapping seasons entirely during lows in the population cycle.
Several provinces are carefully studying the influence of trapping on their
lynx populations and adjusting regulations to protect this renewable resource.
High fur prices have also stimulated interest in raising lynxes on ranches.
It is possible that ranching may one day provide a considerable number
of the pelts that enter trade, as is now the case with mink and fox.
In general, human activities do not
seem to be threatening lynx populations. Although the lynx is usually considered
to be a wilderness animal, human settlement does not seem to have reduced
its range. Logging in the boreal forest that results in a good mix of mature
conifer stands (for cover and travel) and regenerating stands (in which
snowshoe hares abound) may even enhance habitat for lynx. Forestry operations,
however, provide roads and ease of access to the trapper. If the regulations
governing logging are not conservative and flexible enough, extensive clearcutting
that results in the virtually complete removal of conifer forests from
large tracts of land is probably harmful to resident lynx populations.