It was not a human scream. Fish and Wildlife Service posted this photo from Nevada and noted there is a mountain lion in it. Steve Slocum woke up Monday morning to a … GLADSTONE, Mo. An adult mountain lion carrying a recently killed porcupine is shown on a trail camera photo taken in southwest Kansas’ Kiowa County, which was posted early Sunday evening on … It was a big-cat scream — or it sounded like they sound on television anyway. Can you find it? Deb talks about the connection in this Around Kansas segment. I put the thought out of my head since Kansas had not yet had any “official” mountain lion sightings. KIOWA COUNTY, Kan. (KSNW) – The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism captured a photo of a mountain lion in Kiowa County. A couple of Kansas teenagers got the thrill of their lives while out hunting: their hunting dog treed a mountain lion. Photo: John Tull/USFWS Nevada’s mountain … Mountain Lions in Kansas??? The state had documented no mountain lions in Kansas for a century, prior to 2007. The lion was caught on a … -- Mountain lions rarely reach Missouri, but it's not unheard of. This is cool! The U.S. Facebook The Kansas Department of Wildlife Parks and Tourism posted on Sunday that an adult mountain lion was seen on a trail camera in Kiowa County, around 115 miles West Of Wichita, carrying a killed porcupine. Alderson said he thinks the local sighting was of a juvenile male, passing through. The department said 21 mountain lions have been spotted in Kansas since 2007, all of which appear to be young lions on the move. Then I heard it again. Could it be a bobcat? The sighting raised questions on whether mountain lions are already making themselves at home in Kansas, a state not known for wild cats. Confirmed mountain lion spottings have ballooned in the last few years in Kansas, as there have been 21 confirmed sightings in Kansas since … Now, a Gladstone man is convinced one is living in his neighborhood. Kansas’ first documented mountain lion in more than 100 years was shot by a landowner concerned about his livestock near Medicine Lodge in 2007. The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism posted these photos of a Mountain Lion prowling in the wilderness of northwest Kansas recently.