Minnesota's 'Lion King' Hunter Can't Kill This Big Brazilian Cat
17-08-2015
Forbes.com
When Minnesota dentist Walter Palmer killed Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe this summer,
it set off a fire storm against luxurious trophy hunting. In Brazil,
home of the jaguar, hunting this big cat is a luxury few can afford.
Laws make it next to impossible. Even for those with money to burn and
the courage to brave dense jungle and dense heat, going after a jag
comes with a price.
In
2010, a group of land owners in Mato Grosso state gave it a whirl.
Unfortunate for them, police caught them organizing trophy hunting
trips. Eight people were arrested. Somewhat ironically, it was a
Brazilian dentist named Eliseu Augusto Sicoli that was the chief
organizer of the hunts that cost a mere $1,500 per person, per day. By
comparison, Palmer paid around $50,000 in total. Brazil’s Federal Police
said that 28 jaguars were trophy hunted that year on the illegal safari
program.
“You can’t hunt a jaguar and you surely can never bring a jaguar to
the United States or anywhere else as a hunting trophy,” says Ugo
Eichler Vercillo, a director at Brazil’s Ministry of the Environment.
The only way a jaguar pelt or body part makes it into the U.S. would be
through the illegal trafficking of endangered species aboard a private
airplane.
A jaguar captures a yellow anaconda in the
Pantanal, the largest wetland in the world. I it is home to roughly
3,000 jaguars. The population is considered threatened and hunting them
is against the law. (Photo by Douglas Trent/Courtesy of the Pantanal
Wildlife Program)
Hunting has been outlawed in Brazil since 1977. Going after glamorous
tropical animals like the jaguar is only for scientists that may be
allowed to hit it with a tranquilizer gun. In Indian villages, local
tribes are permitted to hunt threatened monkeys if they use it for food.
Jags are not on the menu.
According to the Convention on
International Trade of Endangered Species, or CITES, Brazilian
jaguars are an appendix I endangered species
and cannot be marketed. Lions are considered appendix II, meaning there
is a legitimate hunting market for them. Palmer was within his legal
rights to hunt lions in Zimbabwe.
For years, U.S. hunters have gone to Africa and were allowed to
return home with big game trophy kills under the protection of the U.S.
Fish & Wildlife Service. But now the Service is
considering banning lion hunting by Americans. Disease,
habitat destruction and hunting by the locals and big gamers has cut
the lion population in half over the last 50 years to
around 20,000.
Bringing jaguars into the U.S. is already banned. One reason: the population compared to lions is next to nothing.
Douglas Trent, a well-known American ecologist who has been in and
out of Brazil since 1980, estimates the jaguar population to be around
six thousand in its two main habitats: the Pantanal and the Amazon.
“Jaguars were really threatened by hunting when there was a
commercial market for jaguar furs, but since there is no market for that
now it’s led to less illegal hunting in Brazil,” says Trent. “We hope
the same can be done with lions so hunting these creatures is outlawed.
If not, lions won’t be with us for much longer.”
Trophy hunting is another animal altogether. The hunter isn’t
interested in protecting its goats from predators, nor the fur coat.
They are interested in big game hunting and want to bring back evidence
of the kill. In Cecil the Lion’s case, it was
his head.
“We have to be very vigilante of trophy hunting here and any hunting
of the jaguar,” says Vercillo. Brazil’s Federal Police, now famous for
its busting of a massive corruption scheme inside of state-owned oil
giant
Petrobras , has its own environmental crimes unit dedicated to the illegal capture and kill of rare – and expensive – Brazilian species.
“There is the possibility that other land owners will offer up their
property for adventure-seeking hunters that want a jaguar,” Vercillo
says. Hunters send dogs after the cats to chase it up a tree and shoot
it from there.
“The federal police caught one safari group; they’ll catch the next
one,” Vercillo says. “After this latest news about Zimbabwe, and our
2010 bust of the Mato Grosso hunting tours, I think we will see less of
this activity.”
American president Theodore Roosevelt with a juvenile jaguar he killed with a Winchester 450 in Brazil. (File photo)
American president and big game hunter Teddy Roosevelt hunted
Brazil’s big cats back in 1913 during a four-month expedition in the
Pantanal and Amazon. In his book, the
“Through the Brazilian Wilderness”,
Roosevelt wrote that it was one of the biggest cats he’d ever shot,
noting it was twice the size of a male African leopard and as muscular
as a lion.
Brazilians in Mato Grosso have learned to live with the beast, even
if it does knock off a pet dog and trim a cattle ranchers head count
from time to time. On rare occasions, it will go after humans.
Ranch employee Joao Sousa with his
life-saving dog, Brasão. He was rushed by a jaguar in March 2014. (Photo
by Douglas Trent for FORBES)
They weigh over 300 pounds, have a bite that can crush a human skull,
and – of course – can run fast, have sharp fangs and even sharper
claws. This is the Brazilian velociraptor, and the Pantanal is its
Jurassic Park.
Joao Sousa, 48, works here. He manages cattle on a large ranch along
the Paraguay River and is tasked with making sure the owners’ animals
are alive and kicking. He got up close and personal with Brazil’s beast
in March 2014.
“I could smell a dead animal up ahead and went to check it out on
horseback with my dog,” he says of a five year old beagle named Brasão.
“When I got near it, I dismounted and walked over to see that it was
just a dead crocodile. When I turned my back to walk back to the horse,
that’s when I heard the growling,” he says, adding that he took off his
cowboy hat and tried to redirect the cat away from him like he would
direct a bull. It didn’t work. The jaguar grabbed him by his arm and
only let go when his scream brought on four more dogs to chase it away.
Brasão bit the cat’s underbelly and was hit by its claws, incapacitated
for two months.
“It was seven in the morning when it happened and I saw him. His arm
was wrapped up and bloodied. His face was scratched. He was wiped out,”
says Adelia Campos, one of the maids on the ranch. “This has never
happened. I hope it never happens again. When he returned from the
hospital he was black and blue from his head down to his waist and arm
because of the force of that animal.”
Luiz Alex de Silva Lara was struck by a jaguar when returning from a
fishing trip with his father to a Paraguay River camp site in 2008. The
cat jumped him from behind and broke his neck before dragging him off
into the woods. He was 22. Fishermen found him hours later, chunks of
flesh removed from his body.
Silva Lara was attacked and killed by a
jaguar five years ago, one of the first confirmed killings by a jaguar
in Brazil in years. (Photo by Jackie O. Cruz/FORBES)
Cecil the Lion would have been just as mean. The difference between a
jaguar and a lion is jaguars in Brazil have a lot more places to
hide. It is not easy to find a jaguar, let alone see one when it is
nearby.
Sousa said the jaguar that attacked him was hiding in tall grass and
probably fled his crocodile kill when he saw him coming. He was
protecting his breakfast. Sousa would have been its lunch if not for his
dog, Brasão.
“I don’t even know how many stitches I got,” Sousa says, showing me
his arm. There is a six inch long crucifix stitch carved into his
forearm. “We lose calves all the time here because of jaguars. Forget
goats. We used to have 300. I think we’re lucky to have 30,” he says.
Does he want revenge on these things?
“It’s better to leave them alone,” he says. “It’s a serious law. It’s
not worth going after them. I just know that I don’t want to see it
ever again.”
Two large males battle over a female’s attention in the Pantanal. (Photo courtesy of the Pantanal Wildlife Program)