Jaguars — spotted, stocky and stealthy — once roamed freely throughout the wilds of the Western United States. But like many species before them, the big cat’s resident population in America was hunted to death. For several decades, there have been only occasional sightings of jaguars near the Mexico border.
That changed this week. On Wednesday, the Arizona Game and Fish Department announced that a possible second jaguar had been photographed by a trail camera in Fort Huachuca, a U.S. Army installation in the Huachuca Mountains, not far from the Santa Ritas. Benjamin Tuggle, director for the Southwest Region of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said in a statement that “preliminary indications” suggest that the cat is a male.
That would mean, of course, that even if this cat crossed paths with El Jefe, no mewing jaguar kittens would result to increase the population. But no matter the gender, officials urged jaguar fans to suspend celebrations for the time being.
“While this is exciting news, we are examining photographic evidence to determine if we’re seeing a new cat here, or if this is an animal that has been seen in Arizona before,” said Jim deVos, assistant director of the Arizona Game and Fish Department’s Wildlife Management division.
A few jaguars have been seen in the United States in recent decades. Biologists say they are probably visitors from a neighboring population in Sonora, Mexico. They’ve been fatally shot or have returned to Mexico, Alan Rabinowitz, a big-cat expert, told The Washington Post in 2014. Some conservationists warn that a border barrier like the one President-elect Donald Trump has proposed could disrupt cross-border migration of wildlife, including El Jefe and his fellow jaguars.
News of a possible second jaguar made a splash among biologists on Twitter, who noted that the process of identifying the jaguar should actually be fairly quick. That’s because each cat has its own pattern of spots, so it’s a simple matter of comparison.
This is true! It can be very easy to identify individual jaguars using their unique spot patterns... https://t.co/1yLMnGlBck
— WHAPA Lab (@whapavt) December 8, 2016
The tweeter above, the Wildlife Habitat and Population Analysis Lab at Virginia Tech, quickly put the recently sighted cat’s photo next to a photo of El Jefe.
Here are two photos of the jaguar(s?) found in the US. How many jaguars are actually shown? #HowManyJags pic.twitter.com/JZNdOPL6oe
— WHAPA Lab (@whapavt) December 8, 2016
Votes poured in, and most seemed to think that the images do, indeed, depict two different jaguars.
@am_anatiala could not be more clear to be honest. pic.twitter.com/Rn8FZeTqhx
— Dr Mark D. Scherz (@MarkScherz) December 8, 2016
Seems the consensus is that there are two jags in the US! https://t.co/ZKfx44t3n4
— WHAPA Lab (@whapavt) December 8, 2016
We’ll let you decide for yourself — and we’ll update this when the officials weigh in.
Meanwhile, if you enjoy identifying jaguars by their spots, WHAPA tweeted a few other images for compare-and-contrast fun.
Let's do one more #HowManyJags. Here's four pictures. How many jaguars are there? pic.twitter.com/fe6JnsAjfk
— WHAPA Lab (@whapavt) December 8, 2016
Let's go back to Belize! Here are three pictures of jaguars; how many jaguars are actually represented? #HowManyJags pic.twitter.com/5K49W2VTSU
— WHAPA Lab (@whapavt) December 8, 2016
(Answers: four; two.)
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