Jaguar released in Argentina to help endangered species

Handout picture released by Rewilding Argentina Foundation showing a five-year-old jaguar named Jatobazinhoafter he was released
Handout picture released by Rewilding Argentina Foundation showing a five-year-old jaguar named Jatobazinhoafter he was released back into the wild at Ibera National Park, in Corrientes, on December 31, 2021.

A jaguar named Jatobazinho was released into a national park in Argentina Friday as part of a program to boost the numbers of this endangered species.

This was the eighth jaguar freed this year into Ibera National Park but the first adult male, said the environmental group Rewilding Argentina, which is behind the project.

Jatobazinho weighs about 90 kilos (200 pounds) and has brown fur peppered with black spots.

He first appeared at a rural school in 2018 in Brazil, looking skinny and weak after crossing a river from Paraguay.

The big cat spent a year in an animal refuge in Brazil until he was sent to a jaguar reintroduction center operating since 2012 in Argentina’s northeast Corrientes province, where the species had been extinct for 70 years.

Sebastian Di Martino, a biologist with Rewilding Argentina, said that as the jaguar needed to be nice and relaxed as it left its enclosure and entered the wild.

“If the animal is stressed it can become disoriented and end up anywhere,” he said.

He said these jaguars were fed live prey while in captivity because they have to know how to hunt.

In the Ibera park, there is plenty of wildlife for them to feed on such as deer.

The jaguars are tracked with a GPS device they wear.

There are plans now to release a female that was born at the reintroduction center.

The is also awaiting the arrival of three wild jaguars from Paraguay, and two more raised in captivity in Uruguay and Brazil.

Jaguars are native to the Americas.

It is estimated there were more than 100,000 jaguars when Europeans arrived in the 15th century, their habitat ranging from semi-desert areas of North America to the tropical forests of South America.

Conservation groups say the population of South America has fallen by up to 25 percent over the past 20 years as deforestation eats up their habitat.



© 2022 AFP

Citation: Jaguar released in Argentina to help endangered species (2022, January 1) retrieved 15 January 2022 from https://phys.org/news/2022-01-jaguar-argentina-endangered-species.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Evolution and a possible geographic 'bias' thumbnail

Evolution and a possible geographic ‘bias’

A comparison of metatarsal bones in prehistoric mammals. Credit: Case Western Reserve University A Case Western Reserve University scientist has found that certain prehistoric horse-like mammals in South America evolved differently than their Northern Hemisphere counterparts despite similar changes in climate and ecosystems. The discovery could reveal a previously unknown Northern Hemisphere bias in studying…
Read More
'Deadly serious': Labor mulls budget measures to address women's economic inequality thumbnail

‘Deadly serious’: Labor mulls budget measures to address women’s economic inequality

Key PointsThe government is considering several recommendations from the Women's Economic Equality Taskforce to support women.The task force called for a boost to rent assistance to provide immediate relief to women experiencing housing stress.Finance Minister Katy Gallagher said the government was "deadly serious" about women's economic equality.More financial support for women in housing stress remains
Read More
Robot performs keyhole surgery on pigs with little help from doctors thumbnail

Robot performs keyhole surgery on pigs with little help from doctors

An autonomous surgical robot joined sections of intestine together inside the abdominal cavities of live pigs, with limited intervention from human surgeons Technology 26 January 2022 By Matthew Sparkes Researcher Hamed Saeidi watches the autonomous robot perform surgeryJiawei Ge A robot has successfully carried out keyhole surgery on the bowels of pigs mostly autonomously for…
Read More
China launches ChinaSat-4A communications satellite thumbnail

China launches ChinaSat-4A communications satellite

Launch of ChinaSat-4A atop a Long March 7A from Wenchang, Aug. 22, 2024. Credit: Ourspace HELSINKI — China launched a new communications satellite towards the geostationary belt Thursday, but revealed very little information about the spacecraft. A Long March 7A lifted off from Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan island at 8:25 a.m. Eastern (1225
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share