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Oklahoma wildlife dept. says mount lions don't make good pets. The internet disagrees.

A mountain lion rolls around in the snow.
A mountain panthera leo rolls around in the snow. The big cat is likely not cold in its natural environment. (Prototype credit: Shutterstock)

Pet mountain lions audio like an oxymoron, but after some funny tweeting by the Oklahoma Department of Wild animals Conservation, the country, it seems, is asking whether such ownership is actually a bad idea.

On Jan. 20, the authorities department tweeted (opens in new tab) a photograph of a mountain lion lying in the snow with the caption "YOU are common cold. They have fur. Do non allow within." The tweet was shared more than 22,000 times every bit Twitter users defied the communication and expressed an interest in petting or owning a mount lion.

"My messaging is always 'Practice not pet mountain lions,' and I was so scared that I was going to wake up in the forenoon and people, the whole Internet, had just decided that they were going to practise information technology anyhow," Sarah Southerland, the wild animals department's social media coordinator, told Live Scientific discipline.

Related: In photos: Elusive mountain lions come up out of hiding

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The mount panthera leo tweet was inspired past a meme — usually an prototype with text that is shared around the internet — showing a mountain lion with the catchphrase: "If yous're cold they're cold, bring them inside." This catchphrase was first used to encourage domestic pet owners to bring their pets inside during cold winter months, only net users created parodies for things that are usually non kept inside, such as mountain lions, according to Know Your Meme (opens in new tab), a website that researches and documents memes.

The wildlife department's tweet explained, in a playful fashion, that people shouldn't permit mountain lions inside. When Twitter users started to playfully disagree in the comments, the tweet spread. "It was a dull burn so once information technology picked up it was a wildfire," Darrin Hill, a producer for the wild fauna department who came up with the original tweet, told Alive Science.

More three,000 people commented on the post and thousands more responded in retweets. To fight back against people in favor of letting mount lions inside, Southerland stayed upwardly until iii a.one thousand. local time on Jan. 22 replying to comments with disapproving GIFs of the Ron Swanson character from the television show "Parks and Recreation" (2009-2015).

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Southerland as well Photoshopped pictures of fighting corgi dogs to illustrate her boxing with Twitter users over mountain king of beasts pet ownership. This culminated in her posting a montage of corgis, each expressing a different aspect of the mountain lion argue. "I did have to call my supervisor and tell her, 'Okay, look, this is what's going on and I think I demand to add more corgis,'" Southerland said.

But did Twitter users really want to let mount lions into their homes? "Most people I call up know that they're not large business firm cats and they're very dangerous," Hill said. But he added that despite knowing it's a bad idea, people want to think that they might be able to keep such predators equally pets.

Jerrod Davis, a senior wildlife biologist in the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, noted that mountain lions are wild fauna and keeping them equally pets is illegal in Oklahoma. "Wild animals are unpredictable and confining them in your home can be extremely dangerous, both for the animal and for the homo," Davis said. "They tin accept intendance of themselves far better than any human always could."

Originally published on Live Scientific discipline.

Patrick Pester is a staff writer for Live Scientific discipline. His background is in wildlife conservation and he has worked with endangered species around the world. Patrick holds a master's degree in international journalism from Cardiff University in the U.M. and is currently finishing a second master's degree in biodiversity, development and conservation in action at Middlesex University London.

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Source: https://www.livescience.com/oklahoma-mountain-lion-viral-tweet-explained

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