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WWF works to protect jaguars from extinction in cooperation with local communities, range state governments, and various partners. In 2020, WWF launched its Regional Jaguar Strategy with an ambitious goal to increase or stabilize jaguar populations, prey base, habitat, and connectivity by 2030.
- Amazon | Places | WWF - World Wildlife Fund
Jaguar, Macaw, Amazon River Dolphin, Black Spider Monkey,...
- Jaguar: the amazing Amazon big cat | Stories | WWF - World Wildlife Fund
Unfortunately, the jaguar’s range has decreased by half in...
- Amazon | Places | WWF - World Wildlife Fund
27 Οκτ 2021 · Black jaguars live alone, marking their large territories with their scat and by leaving distinctive claw markings on trees. They can kill just about any type of prey they encounter but prefer large animals such as capybaras, alligators, deer and armadillos.
27 Οκτ 2021 · Two illegal hunters were arrested on October 20 in the municipality of Arame, 476 kilometres from the capital São Luís do Maranhão, in Brazil, for killing a black jaguar inside the Araribóia Indigenous Land in the municipality of Amarante do Maranhão.
The black jaguar (also known as "panther") results from a dominant gene mutation that produces excess melanin and a mainly black coat. Black jaguars, about 6 percent of the entire jaguar population, are found in the densest part of the vegetation, where there is the least sunlight.
12 Μαρ 2021 · A jaguar roars in front of a camera trap in Panama’s Mamoní Valley. The video lasts only 11 seconds, but it provides a valuable glimpse at this iconic animal of the Central American forests.
Unfortunately, the jaguar’s range has decreased by half in the last 100 years due to deforestation and agricultural activities, resulting in reduced and even extinct jaguar populations in some countries. Despite numerous conservation efforts, their populations continue to decline.
Jaguars are considered near threatened by the IUCN. They are considered endangered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and are on Appendix I of CITES. Many populations remain stable but jaguars are threatened throughout most of their range by hunting, persecution, and habitat destruction.