Arizona Jaguars

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chumley
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Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

With all the negative news about budget cuts and closing of state parks, its good to know that our lottery dollars support cool programs like this one. I think Jaguars are the coolest cats out there, and while amazingly beautiful, I'm pretty sure I'd crap my pants if I ever encountered one in the wild. :o

From AZGFD:
Arizona Game and Fish collars first wild jaguar in United States
News Media
Feb 19, 2009

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.

The jaguar was fitted with a satellite tracking collar and then released. The collar will provide biologists with location points every three hours. Early tracking indicates that the cat is doing well and has already travelled more than three miles from the capture site.

The data produced by the collar will shed light on a little-studied population segment of this species that uses southern Arizona and New Mexico as the northern extent of its range.

“While we didn’t set out to collar a jaguar as part of the mountain lion and bear research project, we took advantage of an important opportunity,” says Terry Johnson, endangered species coordinator for the Arizona Game and Fish Department. “More than 10 years ago, Game and Fish attempted to collar a jaguar with no success. Since then, we’ve established handling protocols in case we inadvertently captured a jaguar in the course of one of our other wildlife management activities.”

The jaguar plan, which was created in consultation with other leading jaguar experts, includes a protocol for capture, sedation and handling in the event a cat was captured.

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."

In 1997, a team was established in Arizona and New Mexico to protect and conserve the species. The Jaguar Conservation Team (JCT) began working with Mexico two years later, recognizing that the presence of jaguars in the United States depends on the conservation of the species in Mexico.

Trail cameras and field monitoring are carried out by the Borderlands Jaguar Detection Project, a group that works in cooperation with the JCT.

Jaguars once ranged from southern South America through Central America and Mexico and into the southern United States. By the late 1900s, jaguars were thought to be gone from the U.S. landscape, but two independent sightings in 1996 confirmed that jaguars still used Arizona and New Mexico as part of the northern most extent of its range.

Jaguars are the only cat in North America that roars. They prey on a variety of mammals, fish, birds and reptiles. Individuals in the northern population weigh between 80-120 pounds. Females breed year-round and have litters of one to four cubs that stay with their mother for nearly two years.

This conservation effort is funded in part by the Heritage Fund and Indian gaming revenue. Started in 1990, the Heritage Fund was established by Arizona voters to further conservation efforts in the state including protecting endangered species, educating our children about wildlife, helping urban residents to better coexist with wildlife and creating new opportunities for outdoor recreation. Funding comes from Arizona Lottery ticket sales.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by Grasshopper »

chumley wrote:Jaguars are the only cat in North America that roars.
Interesting to know!
(Outside.. "there is No Place Like It!!")
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JimmyLyding »

Jaguars are big cats, but mountain lions are not. All big cats have some bone in their throat or something along those lines that allows them to roar.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

It has to do with the structure of their larynx.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JoelHazelton »

Cool!!! It'd be amazing to see one of them.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by writelots »

I was hoping they'd give me a general vicinity so I know to wear my metal neck gaiter when I hike through there :( ...

Actually, I think this is awsome. There are still sceptics of the presence of Jaguars in So AZ - or people who find it better for their political cause to be sceptics, anyways. I think this is an important step towards demonstrating the absurdity of human borders placed upon wild systems...
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

Until recent sightings, the last known resident female was killed in 1963 near the Grand Canyon, according to the NY Times. This article below says the last known resident was killed in the Apache National Forest that year.

Here is a story off the Environment News Service from 2008, talking about Macho B, along with a picture of him:
Macho B caught on camera
Macho B caught on camera
Conservationists: Jaguar Recovery Abandoned in Favor of Border Wall
SILVER CITY, New Mexico, January 23, 2008 (ENS) - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced Thursday that it will not prepare a recovery plan for the endangered jaguar and will not attempt to recover the species in the United States or throughout its range in North and South America. The decision was signed by Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dale Hall on January 7.

"The decision also seeks to circumvent the Endangered Species Act from slowing Bush administration plans to build thousands of miles of wall on the U.S.-Mexico border without environmental review. The wall will short-circuit current efforts by jaguars to recolonize the United States," said Michael Robinson of the nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity.

The jaguar was listed as an endangered species throughout its range in 1997, requiring that the Fish and Wildlife Service develop a recovery plan and designate critical habitat. Because the agency did neither, the Center for Biological Diversity filed suit. The lawsuit is active at this time.

In his decision, Hall wrote, "The recovery of the species as a whole depends on conservation efforts in Mexico and Central and South America and we believe that formal recovery planning for the jaguar should be exempted..."

The United States contains a small fraction of the individuals and available habitat of the jaguar, Hall reasoned. "The vast majority of the jaguar's geographic distribution occurs south of the United States. Recovery of the jaguar must be focused on its core range outside of the United States jurisdiction."

Robinson counters, "If the U.S. can work across borders to develop an international recovery plan for the whooping crane, why can't it do so for the jaguar? Perhaps it's because the Bush administration is dead set on walling off the U.S.-Mexico border."

Further, Hall wrote, "Substantial protection for the northern Mexico population of jaguars, which extends within the borders of the United States, can be gained through supporting the existing voluntary approach of the JAGCT [Jaguar Conservation Team] and other programs, and by fostering incentive-based approaches to conservation."

In June 2007, more than 500 members of the American Society of Mammalogists met in Albuquerque and unanimously passed a resolution calling on the Fish and Wildlife Service to develop a recovery plan for the jaguar. The resolution concluded that "Habitats for the jaguar in the United States, including Arizona and New Mexico, are vital to the long-term resilience and survival of the species, especially in response to ongoing climate change."

Dr. Joe Cook, professor of biology at the University of New Mexico and board member of the American Society of Mammalogists, pointed out that historically, the United States has taken a leadership role in international conservation. "Unfortunately, this decision is consistent with an abdication of leadership in the field of conservation of wildlife over the past seven years," he said.

The Fish and Wildlife Service decision invoked a 2004 policy stating that recovery plans need not be prepared for species whose "historic and current ranges occur entirely under the jurisdiction of other countries." The jaguar, however, historically ranged from Monterey Bay, California, to the Appalachian Mountains, and currently occurs in southern Arizona and New Mexico.

Hall's decision also asserts that "actions taken within the United States are likely to benefit a small number of individual jaguars peripheral to the species, with little potential to affect recovery of the species as a whole" and that conservation plans outside the United States are adequate to recover the species.

"If this same logic had applied previously, there would never have been a recovery plan written that resulted in reintroduction of gray wolves to the Yellowstone National Park or the Southwest," said Robinson.

He argues that Hall's rationale is contradicted by the decision's statement that conservation plans outside the United States "have thus far fallen short in stemming the decline of the jaguar."

"If the U.S. cannot make a genuine effort to conserve the jaguar within our borders than how can we ask developing countries to step up to the plate to support this vital part of their fauna?" asked Dr. Cook.

Four jaguars, all presumed to be male and migrants from Mexico, have been photographed in southern Arizona and New Mexico since 1996, Robinson says.

One of them, nicknamed Macho B, identifiable by the unique pattern of rosettes on his fur, has been photographed multiple times over a period extending for more than 10 years in the United States. Many other unconfirmed accounts of jaguars have also been reported.

The last female jaguar confirmed in the United States was shot by a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service predator control agent in the Apache National Forest in 1963.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

Well, if you're writing from New York, the Apache NF is "near" the Grand Canyon, right?
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

:lol:

apache, coconino ... apples, oranges ...
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

Good azcentral article published today on the tagged jaguar, now confirmed as Macho B...

Scientists beginning to get info from tagged jaguar

by Drew Engelbart - Feb. 25, 2009 11:32 AM
The Arizona Republic

Scientists are beginning to learn the lifestyle of the oldest known wild jaguar as it roams through southern Arizona.

The cat was captured last week and fitted with a tracking collar to allow scientists to learn more about the little-known, solitary species.

The Arizona Game and Fish Department has recorded the jaguar traveling several miles in the last week. The cat has mostly stayed near a very high and rugged area in southern Arizona.

The animal has remained in that area for a few days with apparent patterns of rest and visits to a nearby creek.

Since the collaring late last week, the cat has appeared to feed on prey.

Biologists have also confirmed the identity of the jaguar as Macho B, an older male cat that has been photographed periodically over the last 13 years. Macho B is believed to be the oldest known jaguar in the wild, at about 16 years old.

Previously, the oldest known jaguar was thought to be 13 years old.

Biologists are able to study the 118-pound male cat's diet and feeding habits through the satellite tracking technology.

The GPS tracking collar provides location points for the cat every three hours, according to the press release.

The collar weighs less than 2 pounds and should not impede his normal movements or his ability to catch prey.

North Star Science and Technology donated the device, which was specifically designed for a jaguar in the event the species was captured.

The species has been listed in the United States under the Endangered Species Act since 1997, when their presence became known in the Arizona and New Mexico borderlands.

The Phoenix Zoo's jaguar, Lucero, and Macho B are both Northern jaguars. Lucero was rescued after being illegally captured in Mexico. The Mexican government authorized a one-year loan of the cat to the Phoenix Zoo to allow for critical dental surgery, according to Lauren Strait, communication specialist at the Phoenix Zoo.

Strait said that tracking Macho B is a significant breakthrough because there is so little research on these animals. The tracking of Macho B and his foraging patterns will be highly beneficial to the study of the jaguar species.

Macho B was captured and collared on Feb. 18 in an area southwest of Tucson in a research study aimed at monitoring mountain lions and black bears.

Officials estimate that there are 70-100 jaguars left in the wild that are close to the United States, while about 3,000-15,000 remain wild worldwide. Jaguars are also the only cats in North America that roar.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

I like how they try to keep it a secret but still say "a very high and rugged area" southwest of Tucson. I'd bet big money on where that is! :roll:
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

Sad news: Just read tonight that they recaptured the jaguar and euthanized it at the Phoenix Zoo. Macho B was believed to be the oldest jaguar in the wild, (16 years), and suffered massive kidney failure, which is apparently common in older cats.

Makes me wonder if his illness wasn't partially responsible for him getting caught in the first place.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

Ohhhh, that sucks.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

yep, he was 118 pounds. here's a last picture of him
MachoB-euthanized.jpg
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azbackpackr »

Oh, that really sucks! I have that very photo as my desktop on my computer. I had just received that free email newsletter I get from AZ G&F, with links to the photos, telling about putting the collar on him. That is too bad, but he was old, after all. I wonder if he got overstressed from the capture?
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JimmyLyding »

The sad thing is that he may have been the only wild jaguar in the United States. Too bad the border walls do such a good job of stopping wildlife from crossing the border because I keep hearing that they don't do a very good job stopping people.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

azbackpackr wrote:I wonder if he got overstressed from the capture?
The Phoenix Zoo performed an autopsy that determined that he had a kidney condition prior to capture, but that the stress from the capture and the extra work that the kidney had to do to pass the tranquilizing drugs through the jaguar's system likely caused the failure.

AZGFD is now reviewing procedures for dealing with captures of endangered species of advanced age to prevent a similar circumstance in the future.
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by Jeffshadows »

chumley wrote:Sad news: Just read tonight that they recaptured the jaguar and euthanized it at the Phoenix Zoo. Macho B was believed to be the oldest jaguar in the wild, (16 years), and suffered massive kidney failure, which is apparently common in older cats.

Makes me wonder if his illness wasn't partially responsible for him getting caught in the first place.
Wasn't he thought to be the last male Jaguar in the state born outside of captivity or something?
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

I'd have to research that more Jeff. I seem to recall reading that they have photographed several jaguars in southern Arizona over the past decade or so. I believe they were able to determine by spot patterns that several of the photographs revealed the same jaguar, Macho B, but I don't think that all of the photographs showed the same jaguar. Plus, I would guess that where one jaguar roams, another (opposite-sex) can't be too far away?
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Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by Jeffshadows »

I'll have to dig the email I got from one of the conservation groups about this out when I get home and see what they were talking about...
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