| US Jaguars Threatened By Mexico Border Fence 
    
 US: March 25, 2008
 
 
 SANTA RITA MOUNTAINS, Ariz. - Jaguar biologist Emil McCain stoops over a 
    remote-sensing camera attached to a tree in these rugged mountains a few 
    miles to the north of the Arizona-Mexico border.
 
 
 The researcher is checking for images of a handful of extremely rare jaguars 
    that prowl up from Mexico over mountain trails in some of the wildest 
    country in the southwest, although they are now under threat.
 
 Scrolling through images of bobcats and deer snapped by the camera, he 
    explains how the habitat for one of the United States' most elusive 
    predators is being pressured by illegal immigration from Mexico and the 
    controversial remedies sought by the US government to curb it: building 
    fences.
 
 In this election year, Washington hopes to complete 670 miles (1,070 
    kilometres) of pedestrian fencing and vehicle barriers in a bid to seal off 
    some of the most heavily crossed areas of the nearly 2,000-mile (3,200 km) 
    border, despite opposition from some landowners and environmentalists.
 
 "The low flat valleys are effectively walled off to wildlife. As a result 
    everything is funnelled up through the high mountain ranges that span the 
    border" McCain said, standing by the camera box in an area spotted with 
    trash tossed by illegal immigrants.
 
 "The border barriers are directly linked with the funnelling of people into 
    the last remaining habitats. Jaguars are very solitary animals, they can't 
    move freely where there are a lot of people."
 
 
 SOLITARY HUNTERS
 
 Jaguars are powerful, solitary hunters that were revered by ancient cultures 
    including the Aztecs and the Maya who believed they had supernatural powers. 
    They roam over a vast habitat ranging from northern Argentina in the south 
    to the rugged, borderland wildernesses of Arizona and New Mexico, although 
    they are rarely seen.
 
 The sturdy, spotted cats -- which are the only roaring felines in the 
    Americas -- were believed to have become extinct in the United States until 
    an Arizona rancher photographed one he encountered while hunting mountain 
    lions in the far southwest corner of New Mexico in 1996.
 
 "It was unforgettable, probably the most exciting day I have had in my 
    life," Warner Glenn said of his brush with the burly, roaring male jaguar, 
    which his hounds briefly brought to bay on a pillar of rock in the 
    Peloncillo Mountains.
 
 Proof positive of their presence in the United States was gained six months 
    later when another Arizona cougar hunter, Jack Childs, treed and 
    photographed a second jaguar in the distant reaches of the Baboquivari 
    Mountains southwest of Tucson.
 
 "They were on the brink of extirpation and to find out they were still here 
    was a really great thing," Childs said of the animal, another male, which 
    his hounds chased up into an alligator juniper tree.
 
 "It was indescribable, a life-changing experience. We tipped our hats to it, 
    thanked it for the experience and it went on its way."
 
 
 NO BREEDING POPULATION
 
 Neither jaguars were harmed. The photographs taken by Glenn and Childs 
    helped win federal protection for the animals as an endangered species the 
    following year and stirred interest from researchers eager to find out about 
    their population and movements.
 
 Childs, his wife Anna Mary and McCain subsequently founded the Borderlands 
    Jaguar Detection Project, a non-profit which set up some 40 to 50 cameras to 
    photograph jaguars roaming through a highland wildlife corridor in the 
    southwest known as the "Sky Islands."
 
 The mountainous archipelago linking Arizona with the Sierra Madre Mountains 
    in northwest Mexico is a unique zone where temperate species like the wolf 
    and black bear mingle with Neotropical animals such as the jaguar and 
    coatimundi, a sociable raccoon-like animal sometimes mistaken for a monkey.
 
 Over the past seven years researchers repeatedly photographed four or five 
    jaguars. They found that all were males straying north from breeding 
    populations in Mexico, a discovery with considerable implications for their 
    survival in the US southwest.
 
 "Because there are no females and no reproduction, jaguars in the United 
    States are totally dependent on cross-border movement," Said McCain. "That 
    connectivity with Mexico is absolutely crucial."
 
 
 UNCERTAIN FUTURE
 
 As the construction of barriers continued to pressure that connectivity, the 
    US government decided at the start of the year to abandon the recovery of 
    jaguar populations as a federal goal, further calling into question the 
    future of the animals.
 
 McCain says he is concerned that there is no conservation plan to protect 
    the big cats and their core habitat in the United States, which, he says, 
    leaves them increasingly vulnerable should any decision be taken in the 
    future to secure remaining areas of the border with fencing.
 
 "After the Border Patrol finishes securing the lowland areas they will be 
    forced to extend those walls out across the mountain ranges and totally seal 
    off any hopes of jaguars crossing back and forth," he says.
 
 While jaguars would not die out as a species -- fewer than one percent of 
    their total number live in the United States -- losing this elusive predator 
    would signal a retreat on protecting this fragile borderland wilderness for 
    posterity.
 
 "The jaguar is a great emblem of wildness and an example of a healthy 
    ecosystem," McCain said.
 
 "It really inspires people and creates a sense of wonder at the natural 
    world. And in today's world, we really need that."
 
 (Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Eddie Evans)
 
 
 Story by Tim Gaynor
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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