Nature, 1st prize
Cougars
Steve Winter
for National Geographic
for National Geographic
05 April, 2013
A researcher aims a dart gun at a cougar, in order to sedate and collar it with a GPS-tracking device. Biologists in South Dakota are studying the cougar population and their movements in an attempt to prove to local hunters that cougars are not responsible for the lack of elk and deer in the forests.
Cougars, once in decline, have for the past 40 years been making a comeback across the western United States—though they remain extremely elusive. The cats are protected in California and Florida, but prized game in 13 other states.
The success of the recovery in cougar numbers depends in part on where the public will tolerate them, and on strategies for dealing with the difficulties of interaction between humans and cougars in populated regions.
Steve Winter
American photographer Steve Winter started taking photos as a child while growing up in rural Indiana. After graduating from the Academy of Art and the University of San Francisc...
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