On May 23, the Hawaii Department of Agriculture and DOCARE officers deployed to the Manoa area after receiving “multiple citizen reports of a large cat in the area,” and photos posted on Instagram by Donovan Luis appeared to show a wildcat. HDOA staff set up two trail cameras on the mountainside in the area, hoping to catch images of the animal.
However, while on site, HDOA inspectors looked at other photos by Luis that were not posted on social media and believe they were most likely of a dog. But the search continued, because they did not see a dog in the area with the same markings as the animal in the photos.
(Spectrum News reached out to Luis for information, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.)
After three days, HDOA staff took down the two trail cameras and reviewed the footage. “The only images that were captured were of a few feral cats, none of which had the same coloring as in the photo,” an HDOA spokesperson said to Spectrum News in an email.
Ultimately, HDOA concluded that the roaming animal was not a wildcat. In addition to viewing the photos by Luis not posted to social media and deciding they were most likely of a dog, HDOA noted that no one in the neighborhood reported seeing a wildcat.
The Department of Land and Natural Resources said DOCARE officers also ended their search as they did not locate any evidence — paw prints or fecal matter — of a wildcat’s presence.
Jonathan Ho, manager of HDOA’s Plant Quarantine Branch, further told Spectrum News that the animal behaviors seen didn’t match what would be expected from a large wildcat:
- Wildcats have very large territories, estimated to average about 100 square miles. Oahu is about 600 square miles, so seeing a mountain lion twice in a few days is unlikely.
- Also, wildcats are secretive, and people rarely see them during the day. Instead, they are most active at dawn and dusk. “Multiple sightings during the middle of the day don’t comport with normal biology,” said Ho.
- Wildcats avoid people. “The area where it was seen was probably the closest to people as could be,” said Ho.
- There are no reports of missing pets or reductions in the feral cat or chicken population in the area. “As mountain lions are very large, with a male’s average weight of about 150 pounds, they’d need to eat a lot,” said Ho. “This would result in those feral populations' noticeable shrinking or the animal would get desperate and begin to try and hunt pets, further increasing the likelihood of sightings.”
- Lastly, since the trail cameras captured footage of feral cats, it is unlikely there is a large predator in the area. “Animals are aware when they’re being hunted, so seeing them around reduces the likelihood of there being a large cat roaming the area,” said Ho.
“Unless other information is received, there is no further action planned in that area,” the HDOA spokesperson told Spectrum News.
Michelle Broder Van Dyke covers the Hawaiian Islands for Spectrum News Hawaii. Email her at michelle.brodervandyke@charter.com.