Home > Animals, Biology, Conservation > ENDANGERED SPECIES: Arizona Game and Fish collars first wild jaguar in the United States

ENDANGERED SPECIES: Arizona Game and Fish collars first wild jaguar in the United States

February 24, 2009 Buck Leave a comment Go to comments

jaguar-conservationThese unique big cats deserve more protection and funding dedicated to gathering more data.  Furthermore, the U.S.-Mexico border fence is seen as an obstacle to jaguar conservation.  From Arizona Wildlife News:

Jaguar conservation has just experienced an exciting development with the capture and collaring of the first wild jaguar in Arizona by the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

The male cat was incidentally captured yesterday in an area southwest of Tucson during a research study aimed at monitoring habitat connectivity for mountain lions and black bears. While individual jaguars have been photographed sporadically in the borderland area of the state over the past years, the area where this animal was captured was outside of the area where the last known jaguar photograph was taken in January.

.       .       .

Biologists are currently working on an identification analysis to determine if the collared jaguar is Macho B, a male cat that has been photographed by trail cameras periodically over the past 13 years.

The collared jaguar weighed in at 118 pounds with a thick and solid build. Field biologists’ assessment shows the cat appeared to be healthy and hardy.

The species has been protected outside of the United States under the Endangered Species Act since 1973. That protection was extended to jaguars within the U.S. in 1997, the year after their presence in the Arizona and New Mexico borderlands was confirmed.

“We issued a permit under the Endangered Species Act to radio collar a jaguar if the opportunity presented itself,” said Steve Spangle, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Arizona field supervisor. “Gathering habitat use information and learning whether and how the cat is moving in and out of the United States may be essential to jaguar conservation at the northern edge of their range.”

Please visit Arizona Wildlife News for more information.

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