Officers are looking for a house for the trio of Mountain Lion Caps, and earlier this month, the California Fish and Wildlife Department wandered in a surrounding area in San Madio County.
The residents of the Portola Valley discovered 3 months old cubs-named Fern, Thistle and Spurus, and were called wildlife officers, and then they were taken to the Okland Zoo, 40 miles away from a car, where hospital staff carried out health tests.

A veterinarian examines one of the three cubs of cubs brought to the Oakland Zoo.
(Oakland Zoo)
Three cubs were relatively healthy, but it was thin after they were determined that they were not their mother for about two weeks to recover, the zoo officials said A news release this week.
Using trail cameras and local safety cameras, fish and wildlife officials monitored the cats. The company believes that the same lion mother was attacked by a car on the Portola Valley Road, 0.3 miles from where the siblings were found.
“After many witnesses of the mountain lion have been attacked, the body has disappeared and is still being investigated,” the Okland Zoo said in a statement. “Therefore, the CDF cannot confirm the relationship between cats and female lions using DNA.”
The department did not confirm any adult female lion looking or calling her cubs. Three cubs will be captured in their remaining days. Mountain Lion cubs take about two years with their mother, and they need to learn their survival skills before they defend themselves in the forest, said zoo officials.
“Mountain Lions are known to be residing in the Portola Valley area,” the Department of Pay Delta Region's Information Officer Kristen Kellam said by email. “There are appropriate open space, natural habitats on the eastern slopes of the Santa Cruz Mountains.”

Three Puma cubs will be captured in their remaining days. Officials of the Okland Zoo said they need about two years with their mother to learn their survival skills before defending themselves in the forest.
(Oakland Zoo)
2023 report U.C. Breeding rate.
“Human development has significantly improved the well -being of our communities, and it has affected wildlife and their natural habitats simultaneously,” said Nick Tehejia, CEO of Okland Zoo. “Now we have to argue that we have to continue to establish wildlife corridors than now Latest Over Pass in Los AngelesTo maintain the biodiversity of our gold state. ”
Officials said the zoo does not hold cubs and work with the fish and wildlife department to relocate them to permanent home.