<p>Hollywood Cat is no longer. The Los Angeles area's most famous mountain lion, an aged wild male feline sighted around the city's Griffith Park, was euthanized Saturday, wildlife officials said.</p>.<p>For years, it was known to prowl around the hillside "Hollywood" sign visible around much of Los Angeles, a fitting setting for a celebrity cat.</p>.<p>It earned the nickname Hollywood Cat, but the mountain lion -- estimated to be around 11 years old -- is officially called P-22.</p>.<p>State and federal wildlife officers decided earlier this month to capture it due to its erratic behavior, perhaps associated with being struck by a vehicle.</p>.<p>Veterinarians found "significant trauma" to its head, right eye and internal organs, California's Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a statement.</p>.<p>The experts also found underlying health issues, including "irreversible kidney disease, chronic weight loss, extensive parasitic skin infection over his entire body and localized arthritis."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/after-20-years-in-a-cage-freedom-for-albania-brown-bear-1170305.html" target="_blank">After 20 years in a cage, freedom for Albania brown bear</a></strong></p>.<p>"The most difficult, but compassionate choice was to respectfully minimize his suffering and stress by humanely ending his journey," the statement said.</p>.<p>"Mountain lion P-22 has had an extraordinary life and captured the hearts of the people of Los Angeles and beyond."</p>.<p>Euthanizing the cougar was a punch to the gut for game experts who had grown to love the animal.</p>.<p>"This really hurts," said Chuck Bonham, director of the Department of Fish and Wildlife, when he announced P-22's death, according to USA Today.</p>.<p>"It's been an incredibly difficult several days."</p>.<p>California Governor Gavin Newsom praised P-22's "incredible journey" in a statement.</p>.<p>"P-22's survival on an island of wilderness in the heart of Los Angeles captivated people around the world," Newsom said.</p>.<p>Griffith Park, where P-22 lived for perhaps a decade, is hemmed in by freeways and urban sprawl. It is a nine-square-mile (23-square-kilometer) isolated patch of nature.</p>.<p>Experts marveled at how the wild cat got across either of two major Los Angeles freeways -- the 405 and 101 -- to get to Griffith Park as early as 2012.</p>.<p>In a profile of P-22 done long before its death, the National Park Service lamented that Griffith Park is too small for a second cougar, and "it's unlikely he will ever find love with a female lion."</p>.<p>The cat's renown was due to frequent sightings, video doorbell cameras and physical encounters.</p>.<p>A Facebook page in honor of the cougar has over 20,000 followers.</p>
<p>Hollywood Cat is no longer. The Los Angeles area's most famous mountain lion, an aged wild male feline sighted around the city's Griffith Park, was euthanized Saturday, wildlife officials said.</p>.<p>For years, it was known to prowl around the hillside "Hollywood" sign visible around much of Los Angeles, a fitting setting for a celebrity cat.</p>.<p>It earned the nickname Hollywood Cat, but the mountain lion -- estimated to be around 11 years old -- is officially called P-22.</p>.<p>State and federal wildlife officers decided earlier this month to capture it due to its erratic behavior, perhaps associated with being struck by a vehicle.</p>.<p>Veterinarians found "significant trauma" to its head, right eye and internal organs, California's Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a statement.</p>.<p>The experts also found underlying health issues, including "irreversible kidney disease, chronic weight loss, extensive parasitic skin infection over his entire body and localized arthritis."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/after-20-years-in-a-cage-freedom-for-albania-brown-bear-1170305.html" target="_blank">After 20 years in a cage, freedom for Albania brown bear</a></strong></p>.<p>"The most difficult, but compassionate choice was to respectfully minimize his suffering and stress by humanely ending his journey," the statement said.</p>.<p>"Mountain lion P-22 has had an extraordinary life and captured the hearts of the people of Los Angeles and beyond."</p>.<p>Euthanizing the cougar was a punch to the gut for game experts who had grown to love the animal.</p>.<p>"This really hurts," said Chuck Bonham, director of the Department of Fish and Wildlife, when he announced P-22's death, according to USA Today.</p>.<p>"It's been an incredibly difficult several days."</p>.<p>California Governor Gavin Newsom praised P-22's "incredible journey" in a statement.</p>.<p>"P-22's survival on an island of wilderness in the heart of Los Angeles captivated people around the world," Newsom said.</p>.<p>Griffith Park, where P-22 lived for perhaps a decade, is hemmed in by freeways and urban sprawl. It is a nine-square-mile (23-square-kilometer) isolated patch of nature.</p>.<p>Experts marveled at how the wild cat got across either of two major Los Angeles freeways -- the 405 and 101 -- to get to Griffith Park as early as 2012.</p>.<p>In a profile of P-22 done long before its death, the National Park Service lamented that Griffith Park is too small for a second cougar, and "it's unlikely he will ever find love with a female lion."</p>.<p>The cat's renown was due to frequent sightings, video doorbell cameras and physical encounters.</p>.<p>A Facebook page in honor of the cougar has over 20,000 followers.</p>