Armed stake-out for big cats

Armed police are continuing to stake out the farm where at least one big
cat is thought to have killed a dog.
Dyfed-Powys Police sharpshooters have been drafted in to hunt two
puma-like animals which struck at the farm at Llangadog, near Llandovery
in Carmarthenshire, on Sunday evening.

 Farmers are advised to be extra vigilant in the hours of darkness when it
is believed that the cat is more active



Dyfed-Powys Police


The force is warning the public and farmers not to search for the
puma-like cat which attacked the dog within sight of its owner and was
then joined by what could have been its cub.

Officers armed with high-powered rifles are watching the site of the
attack from hides and if the cats return, they will be shot.

This latest alert comes four months after Gwent Police used two
helicopters equipped with thermal-imaging cameras to search for a similar
beast reported on farmland near Newport.


Read this in Welsh
Farmers working near the latest alarm are being urged to patrol in pairs
and carry powerful torches as a way of protecting themselves from possible
attack.

The animal which killed the dog, believed to be a whippet, made no attempt
to attack the dog's owner but police are urging caution in any case.


A puma-like animal is thought to have attacked a dog

The farmer saw the wild cat while checking his sheep. His dog attacked the
animal, which turned and killed it.

The cat then began to start eating the dog before another cat appeared,
which is when the farmer called the police.

One officer has reported seeing a Puma-like animal at the site, which is
between the villages of Llangadog and Myddfai in the Tywi Valley.

The dog's carcass has been taken away for veterinary examination by the
Welsh Assembly's wildlife advisory unit.

A police spokesman said: "It is important to stress that a shotgun will
probably be ineffective against the cat which can cover ground very
quickly.


Big cat sightings are taken seriously

"Farmers are advised to be extra vigilant in the hours of darkness when it
is believed that the cat is more active.

"Farmers should at best be in pairs and carry high-powered torches.

"We ask that local residents do not attempt to search for the cat as this
action is both dangerous and will adversely effect the police operation."

In September 2002, a major search was carried out after two large
unidentified 'cat like' animals were spotted by police in south east
Wales.

Two helicopters fitted with thermal imaging cameras scoured the area above
farmland at Goldcliff on the edge of Newport.

Police marksman searched the Gwent levels and experts from Bristol Zoo
were alerted.

Offspring

Despite the detailed search of the area, no further sightings of the cats
were reported and the search was scaled down.

Last August, the British Big Cats Society said it had received more than
800 reports of animals including pumas, black panthers, leopards and
so-called Fen tigers over a 12-month period.

Experts believe big cats in the UK are the offspring of beasts released by
owners in the 1970s, after the introduction of stringent new laws
governing wild and dangerous animals.




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