The Jaguar Freeway
A bold plan for wildlife corridors that connect populations from Mexico to Argentina could mean the big cat's salvation
- By Sharon Guynup
- Photographs by Steve Winter
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
Fortified by a windfall from a silver-mine investment, Kaplan took a step down that path in 2002 by contacting Rabinowitz. The two men bonded over their desire to save big cats, although it was an unlikely mission for both of them. “Alan is allergic to cats,” Kaplan says, “and I’m a vegetarian—funding ranches with 8,000 head of cattle.”
Late one afternoon, I took a boat up the Cuiabá River with Rafael Hoogesteijn, Panthera’s expert on livestock depredation. It was the end of the dry season, the best time of year to see jaguars. Soon, months of rain would swell the Paraguay River and its tributaries, including the Cuiabá. Their waters would rise by up to 15 feet, backing up like a plugged bathtub and inundating 80 percent of the Pantanal flood plain. Only a few areas of high ground would remain above water.
The Pantanal’s immense freshwater wetlands are the world’s largest, covering almost 60,000 square miles, about 20 times the size of the Florida Everglades. Bulldog-size rodents called capybara watched us, motionless, from the shallows. A lone howler monkey lay in a tree, back legs swinging in the breeze. Caiman submerged as we passed. A six-foot anaconda coiled under a tree. Innumerable birds took flight as we floated by: kingfishers, eagles, cotton-candy-colored spoonbills, squawking parrots, stilt-legged water birds. Jabiru storks with nine-foot wingspans glided overhead.
With abundant prey, the cats here grow to be the largest in all of jaguardom. One male collared in 2008 weighed 326 pounds, about three times more than an average Central American jaguar. The Pantanal ecosystem nurtures perhaps the highest density of jaguars anywhere.
Our boatman veered off into a small creek, navigating low, coffee-colored waters choked with water hyacinth. Fish jumped, glinting, in our wake. A stray piranha landed in the boat, flopping at our feet. We rounded an oxbow and startled a tapir that swam wild-eyed for shore, holding its prehensile, elephantine trunk in the air.
On a sandy beach we spied jaguar tracks that led to a fresh kill. The boatman pulled close. A few scraps remained of a six-foot caiman carcass. Hoogesteijn pointed out the cat’s signature, a crushing bite to the skull, so different from the strangling throat-hold used by lions and tigers. This may be the source of the jaguar’s name, derived from the Tupí-Guaraní word yaguareté, meaning “beast that kills its prey with a single bound.”
Jaguars have the most powerful jaws of any cat, strong enough to crack sea turtle shells. Though they prefer large prey, they’ll eat almost anything—deer, capybara, frogs, monkeys, birds, anacondas, livestock. Jaguars rarely kill people, although they have done so, usually when cornered in a hunt.
A few nights later, we witnessed an adult jaguar silently stalking something in the shallows. It dived, and when it surfaced, a four-foot caiman dangled from its mouth. This amazed the biologists—they didn’t know jaguars hunted with such stealth in water. Much remains to be learned about jaguar behavior.
The Pantanal has been the scene of jaguar-cattle conflict ever since cows were introduced by the early 18th century. Many ranches once employed an onçeiro, a jaguar hunter. It was a position of honor, and Joaquim Proença, now Panthera’s ranch manager, was among the best. He thinks he must have killed 100. In the traditional way, he and a posse tracked a jaguar with a pack of pedigreed hounds, following on horseback until the hounds treed or surrounded the cat. “It was more dangerous when the cat was on the ground, but more manly,” says Proença. “You needed a perfect shot.” When he went to work for Panthera, he sold his hounds and stopped hunting. But the locals still tease him. They say he has lost courage—he’s no longer a man.
Ninety-five percent of the Pantanal’s land is privately owned, with some 2,500 ranches running nearly eight million head of cattle. In a survey, 90 percent of ranchers said they considered jaguars part of their heritage, yet fully half also said they wouldn’t tolerate the cats on their property.
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Related topics: Carnivores Conservation South America
Additional Sources
“A Range-Wide Model of Landscape Connectivity and Conservation for the Jaguar, Panthera onca,” Alan Rabinowitz and Kathy A. Zeller, Biological Conservation, April 2010.
Jaguar: One Man’s Struggle to Establish the World’s First Jaguar Preserve by Alan Rabinowitz, Island Press, 2000
“Kill Rates and Predation Patterns of Jaguars (Panthera onca) in the Southern Pantanal, Brazil,” Sandra M.C. Cavalcanti and Eric M. Gese, Journal of Mammalogy, June 2010.
“Phylogeography, Population History and Conservation Genetics of Jaguars (Panthera onca, Mammalia, Felidae),” Eduardo Eizirik et al., Molecular Ecology, December 21, 2001.
“Planning to Save a Species: The Jaguar as a Model,” Eric W. Sanderson et al., Conservation Biology, January 18, 2002.









Comments (11)
We were recently in the Pantanal to find the Jaguars and were very lucky to see four of these magnificent cats. Our guide also told us of an incident, where a male jaguar was collared, for " study " purposes and after living for 6 years at this sanctuary in peace was rarely seen again, very wary of people and eventually disappeared. The scientists wisely decided to never radio-collar another animal again. A lot of tourists going to the Pantanal feel it serves no purpose to do so, and only stresses the animals out unnecessarily.
Why can't we just enjoy these animals without studying them. It is very worrying, when two animals are found dead, with radio collars and very skinny.
Please stop doing this, in the name of science!
Posted by Gabriele Bown on November 7,2011 | 08:56 PM
Brilliant article. I am writng a book about the Panthera cats and I would like to know where i can get more information if i wnat to photograph jaguars?
Posted by Jens on October 9,2011 | 11:41 AM
We saw one of these magnificient animals this summer in the Pantenal, Brazil. Thank you for the reminder photos of a very special experience. Don and Carol Ware, Florida
Posted by Carol Ware on October 7,2011 | 07:21 PM
I live in Cuiaba and I regularly lead tours to the pantanal and all over Brazil. This work seems beautiful on paper, but the reality is quite different. Me and many colleagues have encountered the Jaguars with collars on a regular basis and many of them do not seem to be doing well. As a matter of fact two of them were found dead last year with the collars on them. ( may not be related to the collars, but they looked very skinny )
I have photos of a Jaguar with a collar that is visibly too tight and the animal has several wounds that appear to be self inflicted by the Jaguar trying to remove the collar. Jaguars are not hunted in this particular study area and they are doing very well and so they have become the main source of revenue for most of the people living in the area as they take people on tours to see jaguars in the wild.
I just do not see how this research program is going to help if the jaguars they are studying are dying!
Posted by Marcelo Padua on October 6,2011 | 02:57 PM
Conservationists in Idaho, Wyoming, Montana, Washington, Alberta, and British Columbia have been trying for years to establish safe passage areas, "freeways" as you calla them in your October issue, for grizzly bears. It has not happened. Whereas once the U.S. was a leader in protecting our wildlife, we are now behind countries in South and Central American and, apparently, Mexico too.
My father (long deceased) was an outfitter and hunted jaguar in the northeast mountains of Mexico in the 1960s. Less interested in the kill than the in the tracking, he would be most pleased to learn there are attempts to restore these magnificent predators to their native landscape.
Posted by Jackie Maughan on October 5,2011 | 10:31 PM
The story and photos got me choked up, There is so much at stake. Thank you for your beautiful coverage and please keep us posted.
Posted by Joyce Gramza on October 4,2011 | 01:17 PM
Brillant,we need more people and locals to understand the Jaguars needs. We have been to the Pantanal(Sept 2009) and we are returning in October 2011 to hopefully see more Jaguars. Well done Sharon Guynup, reading this will amke our trip more enjoyable. We have seen Alan Rabinowitz on the TV in the UK, VERY inspiration. Thank you.
Posted by Kelvin Brown, Lymington,UK on September 26,2011 | 03:31 PM
I have goosebumps! Sharon Guynup transported me to the jungle, took me with her on the river, in this article. My heart is filled with optimism for the future of these storied cats. The spiritual power the people who shared their landscape felt from the cats that watched them by night exerts a powerful influence yet today. Thanks, Smithsonian, for taking us there.
Posted by Christine Heinrichs on September 25,2011 | 07:41 PM
Fascinating article on the great effort to save these magnificent cats. I feel like I've really learned something about the life and history and hopefully continuing lives of jaguars. Also love all the anecdotes; Rabinowitz allergic to cats and Kaplan as a vegetarian cattle rancher. Great writing and gorgeous photos.
Posted by Nancy on September 25,2011 | 06:19 PM
Amazing animal...fantastic video narrated by Steve Winters. Thanks for featuring.
Posted by Julia on September 25,2011 | 10:07 AM
Beautifully written and an excellent overview of what the Jaguar Corridor Initiative is about. I hope many will be inspired when reading.
Posted by Evi Paemelaere on September 23,2011 | 10:01 AM