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Photos Released From Ecuador's First Large-Scale Jaguar Census

Posted on: Wednesday, 28 January 2009, 08:37 CST

The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) released photos today from the first large-scale census of jaguars in the Amazon region of Ecuador—one of the most biologically rich regions on the planet.

The ongoing census, which began in 2007, is working to establish baseline population numbers as oil exploration and subsequent development puts growing pressure on wildlife in Ecuador's Yasuni National Park and adjacent Waorani Ethnic Reserve. Together, these two protected areas make up some 6,500 square miles (16,800 square kilometers) of wilderness.

The research is being carried out by a team led by WCS research fellow Santiago Espinosa. Espinosa's team, which includes several members of the Waorani indigenous group, set up a complex system of "camera traps," that photograph animals remotely when they trip a sensor that detects body heat. His work is being funded by WCS, WWF, and the University of Florida.

So far the team has taken 75 pictures of jaguars, which can be individually identified through their unique pattern of spots. Other images show jaguar prey species, such as white-lipped peccaries, and other rarely seen species, including two pictures of a short-eared dog, a relative of foxes and wolves.

"The main threats to jaguars in Ecuador are habitat degradation and loss due to various human activities," said Espinosa. "Bushmeat hunting by local communities has increased due to road development that provides access to otherwise isolated areas. Additionally, people hunt bushmeat to sell commercially in local markets, rather than simply for their own consumption. There is competition for food as people hunt the same prey species as the jaguar. If the prey species disappear, the jaguar will be gone."

Espinosa's preliminary data show far fewer jaguars in more hunted areas compared to remote study sites. In his first survey at a heavily hunted site within Yasuni National Park, Espinosa identified only three individual jaguars. At his second study site in a rarely hunted and remote area, he distinguished 14 different jaguars—almost five times as many as near the populated site.

Espinosa and WCS plan to extend the jaguar camera trap surveys to other areas of Ecuador, working with local communities in both the Amazon region and along the coast where most of the forests are gone but still may provide refuge to jaguars.

The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation has provided funding for WCS's applied jaguar conservation research in Ecuador and throughout the Amazon Basin. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has also provided support to WCS jaguar work.

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Image Caption: A jaguar recently captured in a camera trap in Ecuador. Credit: Santiago Espinosa

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User Comments (2)

2. Posted by Randall Smith on 01/29/2009, 18:27
Mark - what is up kind sir? I lived in the Amazon 14 years and never saw this "dog" as well as many of the indigenous peoples that live there. Jaguar are top predators and therefore naturally rare. With deforestation, overhunting by indigenous peoples, the oil industry, etc., jaguar hunting @ $50,000 is not going to protect this species. Sounds like you are full of "false" knowledge.
1. Posted by Mark on 01/28/2009, 10:32
How wouldn't WCS know that the "rare dog' is an extremely common crap-eating fox. Is this an attempt to manipulate us readers with false propaganda? Protecting the environment though honest, accurate, and realistic conservation is the only "way-ahead". Twisting the story to pull on the heart-strings of readers is not. Open the mind to this...Why not let an individual pay $50,000 to hunt a jaguar, and all that dough could go to recognized programs and the communities that fight to protect the jaguar and its habitat? Before blasting an emotional heck-no, just think about it. It makes sense, period.

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