The state's Department of Game and Fish and U.S.D.A. Wildlife Services captured and killed a second mountain lion Tuesday morning resulting from the search for the lion that killed a Pinos Altos man, according to a press release from the Department of Game and Fish.
The first lion was caught and killed June 24 and may have been the one that killed and partially ate 55-year-old Robert Nawojski June 17 or 18 near his Pinos Altos home, the release said.
"We knew from tracks that we had two lions in the area, and we wanted to be thorough," Department Conservation Officer Leon Redman said in the release. He described the mountain lion killed Tuesday as a healthy 80- to 90-pound female. It was caught in a snare about a quarter-mile from the residential area in Pinos Altos. "We believe its tracks were seen in the Pinos Altos area," Redman said in the release.
The lion was taken to the Veterinary Diagnostic Services laboratory in Albuquerque for a necropsy.
The capture of the second lion ended a search that began June 20 after Nawojski's body was found near a rock ledge about 60 yards from his home where he liked to frequent. Medical investigators later confirmed that Nawojski was killed and partially eaten by a mountain lion, the release stated.
The lion captured June 24 was a healthy 138-pound male. A necropsy found two buckshot pellets in the lion's body, indicating it was the same lion wounded by a department officer June 19 near Nawojski's home. A rabies test on the lion was negative, the release said.
Wildlife Services agents pulled all snares from the area Tuesday morning and called off searches with dogs.
Signs notifying the public of the snares were placed on area roads and trails and in public places. Unfortunately, the snares also caught a bear, a javelina and a horse, the release said.
A woman was thrown from her horse after it was caught in a snare. She and the horse received minor injuries. The bear was believed to be one that Department officers were trying to trap and relocate after reports it was a nuisance and safety hazard near the Bear Creek Cabins, the release said.
The bear was feeding on a javelina caught in a snare when it became entangled in another snare. The bear was seriously injured by the snare and had to be euthanized, according to the release.

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