World Animal News

Scientists Say It’s Time To Reintroduce Jaguars Back Into The U.S. After Being Driven To Extinction 50 Years Ago

A predatory jaguar on a tree.

Before being driven to extinction in the United States, jaguars lived for hundreds of years in the central mountains of Arizona and New Mexico. Now, a group of scientists are saying that it’s time to reintroduce the big cats back into the U.S.

U.S. government agents and private citizens hunted and poisoned jaguars for most of the 20th century. As a result of persecution here and elsewhere, jaguars were listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

In a study published yesterday in the journal Conservation Science and Practice, the authors provide a prospective framework for this effort and describe “righting the wrong” done to “America’s Great Cat” in the Southwest more than 50 years ago. 

Authors of the study include a diverse set of scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Center for Landscape Conservation, Defenders of Wildlife, Wildlands Network, Pace University, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, Life Net Nature, and the Center for Biological Diversity.

In March, a separate study suggested that an area in central Arizona and New Mexico spanning 2 million acres can provide potentially suitable habitat for 90 to 150 jaguars. This area, roughly the size of South Carolina, was not considered in the 2018 US Fish and Wildlife Service Recovery Plan for the jaguar. That plan considered only habitat south of Interstate Highway 10 (an artificial boundary considering historic jaguar records just north of that) and therefore concluded there was habitat for only six jaguars in the U.S.

However, habitat destruction, transportation infrastructure, natural constrictions in the landscape, and the border wall mean that natural reestablishment of female jaguars from source populations in Mexico to this recovery region is unlikely over the next 100 years.

The authors of this week’s study conclude that reintroduction of jaguars should be examined as a viable alternative. The authors believe that restoring jaguars can be a net benefit to people, including culture, local economies, and nature, and would represent the return of an original part of the U.S. fauna. The study focuses on five dimensions of the reintroduction project: conservation rationale, history, ecological context, human context, and practical considerations.

“The jaguar lived in these mountains long before Americans did,” said Eric Sanderson, WCS Senior Conservation Ecologist and lead author of the study, in a statement. “If done collaboratively, reintroduction could enhance the economy of this region and the ecology of this incredible part of jaguar range.”

The study notes some key aspects of the reintroduction efforts to be discussed with relevant officials and the public in central Arizona and New Mexico, noting that:

“The Southwest’s native wildlife evolved with jaguars,” said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity. “They have a storied and vital place in our canyons and forests, so we should plan an intelligent and humane reintroduction program.

WAN and Peace 4 Animals couldn’t agree more. We need to focus our efforts not only on the reintroduction of endangered species such as the Jaguar, but protecting their vital habitat from human encroachment, development, deforestation for the paper, pulp, and palm oil industries, and using their land to graze cattle for the meat and dairy industry, which in turn leads to human-wildlife conflict.

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