Yellowstone Wildlife Explorer logoYellowstone WildlifeExplorer
Lynx
Enthusiast targetHard to findSmall mammals

Yellowstone Lynx

Federally threatened — effectively never seen.

Threatened
Federally listed
~Single digits
Confirmed detections (decades)
Snow cat
Huge paws
Never seen
Realistic

Overview

Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis) are specialized snow cats — huge paws act like snowshoes, and they depend on snowshoe hares. They live in subalpine conifer forest and are extraordinarily secretive.

Yellowstone sits at the southern edge of their range. Confirmed detections (camera traps, tracks, hair snares) number in the single digits over decades. A visual sighting by a visitor would be exceptional and should be reported.

Where to find them

  • Subalpine conifer forest: Deep snow, snowshoe-hare habitat — remote.

When to look

Dawn, dusk, and night, winter — but realistically, you will not see a lynx in Yellowstone.

⚠️Stay at least 25 yd away

Observe and report. Lynx are federally threatened; any confirmed sighting is scientifically valuable — tell a ranger.
Want the full interactive data? Open the Wildlife Explorer to see Lynx's viewing areas on the map, and explore all 17 animals with their field guidance.
Planning when to go? See weather, daylight, and what else is active in our month-by-month wildlife guide — best for Threatened federally listed in lynx.

Frequently asked questions

Are there lynx in Yellowstone?+

Yes, but barely — a tiny, threatened population at the southern edge of their range. Confirmed detections (via cameras, tracks, and genetics) number in the single digits over decades.

How is a lynx different from a bobcat?+

Lynx are larger with huge snowshoe-like paws, longer ear tufts, and a completely black-tipped tail. Bobcats are smaller with smaller paws and a white underside to the tail. Most 'lynx' sightings are bobcats.

What should I do if I see a lynx?+

Observe from distance, note the location and time, and report it to a ranger. Confirmed lynx records are scientifically valuable and contribute to monitoring the threatened population.

Sources & data notes

  • Lynx data is drawn from official NPS, USGS, and NOAA sources catalogued in our source registry. Observer-submitted sightings are not published on this public guide.
  • Lynx is documented via NPS reference pages; no dedicated population time-series is in the public dataset.

Spotted something off, or want a deeper dive? Every claim above links to its original source — look for the markers and the Sources section.