A wild puma was found living i

Image: Via Twitter @_WildTrails

A wild puma was found living in a New York City apartment

An 11-month old puma was found in a Bronx apartment and was rescued by the police and the Humane Society of the United States.

A wild puma was found living i

Image: Via Twitter @_WildTrails

US authorities have rescued from a New York apartment a feline that was no house cat – she was an 80-pound (36.2Kg’s) wild cougar. The 11 month old puma – called Sasha – was living inside a home in the Bronx, officials said.

ALSO READ: What in the deep blue sea! Shark with face of pig goes viral [photos]

OWNERS HAD TO SURRENDER THE BIG CAT

She was rescued last week in a joint operation by police, the Humane Society of the United States, city officials and Bronx Zoo personnel. The owner “surrendered” the big cat and was present during the removal, the groups said in a statement Monday.

The mountain cat was taken to the Bronx Zoo, where veterinarians examined her over the weekend. Sasha was then transported to Turpentine Creek animal sanctuary in Arkansas, which cares for neglected big cats.

“This cougar is relatively lucky that her owners recognized a wild cat is not fit to live in an apartment or any domestic environment,” said Kelly Donithan, director of animal disaster response for the Humane Society,” she said.

“The owner’s tears and nervous chirps from the cougar as we drove her away painfully drives home the many victims of this horrendous trade and myth that wild animals belong anywhere but the wild,” she added.

NOT THE FIRST BIG CAT FOUND IN NEW YORK

NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said the case was under investigation and no further information, including about the owner, was immediately available.

Sasha isn’t the first big cat or exotic pet to have come to the attention of authorities in New York. Police removed a 425-pound (193Kg’s) adult tiger called Ming from an apartment in Harlem in 2003 while in 2004, an eight-year-old boy on Long Island was attacked by his father’s pet leopard.

Animal rights activists want Congress to pass the Big Cat Public Safety Act, which would strengthen laws prohibiting the breeding and possession of species such as lions, tigers, cheetahs and jaguars.

ALSO READ: The butterfly effect: Lensman documents Colombia’s ‘winged jewels’