As a species, the cougar is not endangered. But the subspecies in Florida, called "Florida panther", is endangered.
Only the Florida subspecies of the cougar is endangered, The species, as a whole, is in no danger.
Both. These two pretty much go hand in hand. First a species is classfied as endangered, and then to protect it from becoming extinct, it's protected.
No, the cougar is not endangered except for the Florida subspecies. Overall it is listed as a species "of least concern."
The only endangered race of the cougar or mountain lion, puma, etc, is the Florida panther. As a species, the cougar is listed as least concern.
Eastern cougars are no longer an endangered species as they were declared extinct in 2011.
The cougar, mountain lion, panther, or puma is not an endangered species. Only the Florida subspecies is endangered.
Only one or two local subspecies of the cougar, such as the Florida Panther, are endangered. The species as a whole is in no danger.
Only the Florida subspecies is endangered. The species, overall, is in no danger and is listed as a species "of least concern".
As a species, Felis Concolar (puma, cougar, mountain lion) is not endangered, but the Florida race is.
The subspecies eastern cougar (or puma) was declared extinct in 2011. However, the species as a whole is not endangered and populations are quite healthy except for the Florida subspecies which was declared endangered in 1967.
There not on it. They are. Check the Wikipedia article for Florida Panther. They are a type of "cougar" or "mountain lion" or "panther" or "catamount" or whatever you want to call them. There are several other subspecies of cougar on that list as well.