How many bobcats are in Indiana? This year’s trapping season could help settle the debate

IPB News | By Rebecca Thiele

Published December 9, 2025 at 3:12 PM EST

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A bobcat looks like a slightly larger domestic cat with a speckled fur pattern. It's flanked by a bush with red berries.
The Indiana Department of Natural Resources recently ended Indiana’s bobcat season early after trappers caught the state’s quota of 250 bobcats.

Indiana’s first bobcat season in decades is already over, but the work to gather data on bobcats in the state has just started.

Data from the season could settle a long debate between trappers and wildlife advocates about how many bobcats are in Indiana. Trappers say bobcats are plentiful enough to hunt, but wildlife advocates disagree.

The Indiana Department of Natural Resources recently ended Indiana’s bobcat season early after trappers caught the state’s quota of 250 bobcats. The season was supposed to run from early November to late January, or until a quota was reached.

That might indicate Indiana has a healthy population of bobcats.

Geriann Albers is the furbearer and gamebird program leader for the DNR. She said the DNR needs more information to say for sure — like how many traps people set out over how many days.

“It’s even more important to know how much effort people were expending to get there. Because that gives us a feel for people were having to work really hard to catch a bobcat or actually, it was pretty easy — the bobcats were probably doing pretty well and people were catching them really fast,” Albers said.

Albers said most people who trapped bobcats this season were Indiana residents trapping on private land.

The DNR plans to survey people with bobcat licenses in the coming weeks and release its findings from the season in the spring or summer.

New York State Museum: Wild Gray Wolf killed by hunter in Central New York

A Gray Wolf killed in Otsego County in 2021 marks a rare return of the species to the region, offering insights into their travel patterns from Canada.

Credit: New York State Museum

Cherry Valley wolf skull on display at New York State Museum

Author: WGRZ Staff

Published: 7:19 PM EST December 9, 2025

Updated: 7:19 PM EST December 9, 2025

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ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York State Museum can now confirm that an animal shot and killed in Otsego County in 2021 was a wild Gray Wolf. The findings were published in the latest issue of Northeastern Naturalist.

Gray wolves were eliminated from the northeastern United States by the end of 19th century. This is the first documented case of one of these animals south of the St. Lawrence River in Decades. Officials say the discovery provides insight into how wolves travel.

RELATED ARTICLE: Cry wolf? Debate over presence of wolves in Northeast

“The Cherry Valley wolf specimen is an exceptionally important piece of physical evidence of occasional dispersals by wild wolves into the northeastern U.S. from core breeding areas in eastern Canada.” says Dr. Jeremy Kirchman, the NYSM Curator of Birds and Mammals. 

To identify the wolf, researchers from the museum, Princeton University, and the Northeast Ecological Recovery Society conducted extensive analyses of the animal’s genes. They say DNA comparisons across the genomes of more than 400 sampled wolves, coyotes, and dogs firmly grouped the specimens with Canis lupus.

In addition, Skull measurements and body mass showed the animal was larger than eastern coyotes.

Because of the discovery, the New York State Department of Conservation has increased its efforts to help hunters distinguish between coyotes (which can be legally hunted in New York) and wolves (which are protected under state and federal law). However, there are still challenges with identification, due to the history of mixing between wolves and coyotes in eastern North America.

As for the hunter who shot and killed the wolf, they cooperated fully with officials and was not fined.

The NYSDEC confiscated the taxidermy mount and skull and transferred them to the New York State Museum. The Cherry Valley wolf is currently on display as part of the Canine Contrasts exhibit, where visitors can learn about the complex relationship between wolves, coyotes, and their hybrid descendants.