A jaguar chases a caiman in the Pantanal. Given the cats’ broad diet and comfort in water, prowling a riverbank is “like scanning a buffet line,” says biologist and National Geographic ...
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Jaguar release offers a lifeline to Gran Chaco’s lonely big catsA 2017 study shines a light on how important jaguar tourism is in the Pantanal: jaguar watching generated $6.8 million in gross annual income in the northern Pantanal, against $121,500 in losses ...
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Researchers make stunning discovery in recent tests of Brazilian big cat's feces: 'It stood out so much'Scientists in Brazil's Pantanal, the planet's biggest tropical wetland, found dangerous parasites in jaguar droppings. The discovery came as a surprise. "We found it in many fecal samples.
A jaguar’s ultra-strong jaws and teeth can bite through a ... we’re also helping to look after other wildlife – of which there are a lot of in the Amazon and Pantanal.
Skipper and zoologist, Abbie Martin heads south to the Northern Pantanal during the off season to work on Jaguar conservation and identification.
Rojo has been growing stronger and more independent, preparing for the moment when zoo visitors could finally catch a glimpse of him.
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Ian Ford (UK) documents the moment a jaguar bites and kills a caiman in the Pantanal. A call over the radio alerted Ian that a jaguar had been spotted prowling the banks of a São Lourenço River ...
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