Protect Mountain Lions From Being Chased By Dogs And Gunned Down

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Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site

South Dakota has unleashed a cruel new rule letting hunters chase mountain lions with dogs, driving terrified cats to exhaustion and death.

Protect Mountain Lions From Being Chased By Dogs And Gunned Down

South Dakota has approved a rule that allows hunters to unleash hounds across larger areas of the Black Hills to chase mountain lions until the exhausted cats collapse or climb trees, where they can be killed at close range. The decision expands one of the cruellest hunting methods and threatens the survival of a species already struggling against habitat loss and human encroachment1,2.

Why Mountain Lions Matter

Mountain lions are apex predators that keep ecosystems balanced. They regulate deer and other prey populations, protecting vegetation and the health of entire landscapes. When these cats are removed, ripple effects spread across the environment. Killing a single female can leave cubs to slowly starve, multiplying the cruelty3.

These animals were once nearly eradicated in South Dakota through bounties and unregulated killing. They only recolonized the Black Hills in the 1980s, and regulated hunting began in 2005. Expanding dog-assisted hunts risks pushing them back toward dangerous decline2.

The Myth of Management

Supporters argue hound hunting helps manage populations. But the science does not support claims that chasing lions with dogs reduces conflicts with humans or livestock. Research shows lions chased with dogs often return to the same areas, and any increase in avoidance of people is temporary at best1. What hound hunting does achieve is dramatically increasing hunters’ success rates—from less than 4% to more than 50%. This is not management. It is the systematic targeting of a vulnerable species.

A Call for Compassion

Sanctioning this cruelty ignores the role mountain lions play in healthy ecosystems and disrespects the public’s concern for humane treatment of wildlife. Fair chase—the principle that hunting should give animals a chance to escape—is thrown aside when packs of dogs are deployed. What remains is cruelty, plain and simple.

It is time to choose compassion over exploitation. South Dakota should be leading in wildlife stewardship, not expanding practices that cause unnecessary suffering. Every lion saved is a step toward a more balanced environment and a future where people and predators can coexist.

Take Action

Join us in calling on the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission to ban the use of dogs in mountain lion hunts. Sign the petition today and help protect these vital predators from cruelty. Together, we can ensure a better future for wildlife, ecosystems, and communities.

More on this issue:

  1. Paige Munson, Mountain Lion Foundation (14 January 2025), "To Chase or Not to Chase: Hazing Mountain Lions with Dogs."
  2. Josh Haiar, Outdoor News (16 July 2025), "South Dakota seeks comment on controversial mountain lion proposal."
  3. Bob Speirs, Rapid City Journal (n.d.), "Mountain lion hunt becoming big business in South Dakota."

The Petition

To the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission,

We, the undersigned, call for the immediate end to the cruel and inhumane practice of allowing hunters to chase mountain lions with dogs in the Black Hills and surrounding regions.

Mountain lions are among North America’s most vulnerable wild cats. They face shrinking habitats, increasing human encroachment, and slow reproductive rates. Each death has ripple effects far beyond the individual animal. When a female is killed, her dependent cubs are often left to starve. Removing even a small number of breeding adults can destabilize populations that are already fragile.

Expanding hound hunting does not reflect responsible wildlife management. Dogs are unleashed to chase lions across rugged terrain until the exhausted animal collapses or climbs a tree. At that moment of extreme stress, the mountain lion is shot at close range. This is not fair chase. It is legalized cruelty. The practice also places dogs at risk of injury and further undermines public confidence in wildlife management decisions.

Mountain lions play an essential role as apex predators. By keeping deer and other prey populations in check, they help maintain the balance of ecosystems that support countless other species. To sanction their harassment and killing in this way is to weaken the very landscapes South Dakotans cherish.

The Commission has the responsibility to protect South Dakota’s wildlife for the benefit of all residents, not just a narrow group of trophy hunters. There are many proven, nonlethal coexistence strategies available to minimize conflicts between humans and large carnivores. These methods emphasize prevention, deterrence, and education rather than blood sport.

We urge you to act with compassion and humanity. Protecting mountain lions is not only about saving a single species—it is about defending the health of entire ecosystems and upholding ethical stewardship of wildlife.

Ending hound hunting will send a clear message that South Dakota values conservation over cruelty. By choosing to safeguard these cats, you will be preserving biodiversity, respecting the natural order, and ensuring that future generations inherit thriving wild landscapes.

Please ban hound hunting of mountain lions now. In doing so, you will help build a better, more sustainable future for animals, people, and the environment we all share.

Sincerely,

DEV MODE ACTIVE. BRAND: gg