A USAID-funded buffer zone keeps the highly capable predator away from ranchers, while imparting sustainable cattle practices along the frontier.
For many years, the jaguar, the largest feline in the Western Hemisphere and endangered in Colombia, has been a serious challenge to farmer communities living in the high mountains of the Andean Range. This “king of the tropical forest,” like many large, free-ranging wildlife species, generally lives within protected areas, but for a variety of factors moves beyond those areas in search of food, shelter and, ultimately, survival.
Out of necessity, jaguars expand their search for food in the areas around farmer communities and face the threat of being killed by cattle ranchers who need to protect their livestock from this highly capable predator.
In the village of El Pesebre in the municipality of Tame, Arauca in eastern Colombia, a heightened sense of frustration was setting in with the increased number of predation cases between 2007 and 2009, which in the case of a local cattle rancher, totaled up to 22 cattle deaths.
According to Esteban Payán, a preeminent biologist and jaguar expert in Colombia, “Jaguars prefer to eat the cattle because, when trees have been felled, wild animals become rare and jaguars can no longer hunt their normal prey. They look for food on the farms and then the people have a reason to kill them.”
This conflict between jaguars and people was affecting the jaguar population and the livelihoods of cattle-ranching communities and ecosystems in and around the El Cocuy National Natural Park.
From February 2011 to August 2013, USAID’s Conservation Landscapes Program partnered with the Panthera Foundation to create what turned into an 11-mile natural pathway to protect jaguars crossing through the Andes Mountains to reach the hot plains of Tame, Arauca in eastern Colombia.
Avoiding Invasion
The first step was to identify the safest corridor area and define buffer zone boundaries. This was done by collecting information on jaguar habitat requirements, jaguar and prey locations, predominant land uses, and any future developments that could threaten the sustainability of the corridor.
Through the course of this process, the Panthera Foundation developed a stabled cattle-raising system for the participating farmers, then moved the farms out of the corridor areas, and placed wooden post electric fences to block the jaguar’s entrance into the farms. Under this system, cattle are raised in a confined space rather than having open range, which increases deforestation.
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