Thursday, 2 March 2017

Third rare jaguar spotted in Arizona (USA), state wildlife officials say

Third rare jaguar spotted in Arizona, state wildlife officials say

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http://www.havasunews.com/news/third-rare-jaguar-spotted-in-arizona-state-wildlife-officials-say/article_424ef7de-ff6f-11e6-9a04-679f78427f78.html



The third jaguar documented in southern Arizona since September 2012 was photographed by a Bureau of Land Management trail camera in Cochise County. The image was taken on Nov. 16 in the Dos Cabezas Mountains 60 miles north of the U.S.-Mexico border; the camera data was only recently retrieved. This is the only jaguar photographed by this BLM-deployed camera since it was installed in August 2016. The camera remains on site.
Five Arizona Game and Fish Department scientists independently completed an analysis of the photo, comparing the jaguar’s spot patterns to other jaguars sighted previously in Arizona, according to the Arizona Department of Game & Fish. They concluded that the jaguar hadn't been previously identified. The sex of the jaguar could not be determined by the photo. 
 “Since 2012, an increase in trail camera monitoring of mountainous habitat in southern Arizona has provided increased documentation and a better understanding of jaguar presence and habitat preferences,” said Steve Spangle, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Arizona field supervisor, in a news release. “This supports the phenomenon that jaguars seeking territories outside of competitive breeding areas in Mexico continue to occasion Arizona.”
“This is a unique development. Jaguars are a historical component of Arizona’s wildlife diversity,” said Jim deVos, Assistant Director for Wildlife Management at the Arizona Game and Fish Department. “However, given the irregularity with which jaguar presence in Arizona is documented, even with the expanded use of trail cameras, this sighting is not an indication that jaguars are establishing a population in Arizona.”
BLM Safford Field Office Manager Scott Cooke said the finding shows the public lands in the Dos Cabezas Mountains are an important wildlife corridor, linking the northern end of the Chiricahua Mountains.  
A male jaguar was repeatedly documented in the Whetstone and Santa Rita Mountains between 2011 and 2015. Another male has been twice photographed in the Huachuca Mountains in December 2016 and January 2017.
 The jaguar has been protected in the U.S. as endangered under the Endangered Species Act since 1997. 

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