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 4 of 5)
Under Hoogesteijn’s supervision, the conservation ranches are testing various ways to protect livestock. One measure is to graze water buffalo among cattle. Cows tend to stampede when a jaguar comes near, leaving calves vulnerable. “For jaguars, it’s like going to Burger King,” Hoogesteijn says. Water buffalo encircle their young and charge intruders. Panthera is testing water buffalo in the Pantanal and will expand the test herds to Colombia and Central America next year. Another Panthera experiment will reintroduce long-horned Pantaneiro cattle, a feisty Andalusian breed brought to South America centuries ago by the Spanish and Portuguese. Like water buffalo, these cattle defend their young.
Because jaguars tend to approach cattle under cover of forest, some Pantanal ranchers corral their pregnant females and newborns at night in open, lighted fields surrounded with electric fences packing 5,000 volts—strong enough to discourage even the hungriest cat.
To figure out where the corridors should be, Rabinowitz and other biologists identified all the so-called “jaguar conservation units” where breeding populations of the cats live. Kathy Zeller, a Panthera landscape ecologist, mapped pathways linking the populations, taking into account proximity to water, distance from roads and urban settlements (jaguars shy away from people), elevation (under 3,000 feet is best) and vegetation (cats avoid large open areas). Out of 182 possible corridors, 44 are less than six miles wide and are considered at risk of being lost. Panthera is securing the most fragile tendrils first. “There are places where if you lose one corridor, that’s it,” she says. Researchers are now checking out the pathways, interviewing locals, tracking collared cats and ascertaining the presence—or absence—of jaguars.
Rabinowitz has met with government leaders about drawing up zoning guidelines to protect corridors. “We’re not asking them to throw people off their property or create new national parks,” he says. The goal is not to halt development, but to influence the scale and placement of mammoth projects like dams or highways. The strategy has worked on a smaller scale for cougars in California and grizzly bears in the western United States.
In April 2009, Costa Rica incorporated the Barbilla Jaguar Corridor into its existing wildlife corridor system. Panthera regards the initiative as a possible model for the Americas. It’s overseen by a 25-person Costa Rican corridor committee of ecotourism operators, indigenous leaders, cowboys, cilantro farmers, villagers, businessmen, university researchers and others. They helped identify an imminent threat: a hydroelectric project on Reventazón River that would bisect the Barbilla corridor and block the passage of jaguars. With advice from Panthera, Costa Rica’s electricity utility is considering creating a buffer zone by buying adjacent forest and reforesting along the reservoir’s edge to keep a pathway intact.
Perhaps the most critical link runs through Colombia, where only a few Andean passes are low enough for cats to cross. Losing this corridor would split the trans-American population in two, and the jaguars on either side would no longer interbreed.
The region is as important to the illegal cocaine trade as it is to jaguars. Last fall, Panthera’s researchers in Colombia were setting up camera traps when a killing spree in their hotel and on a nearby road left four people dead. There are ongoing battles among guerrilla and criminal groups for control of cocaine fields and trafficking routes. Targeted kidnappings and murder are commonplace, and the landscape is riddled with land mines. It’s nearly impossible for biologists to study jaguars here, or protect them.
There are challenges all along the jaguars’ range. Sinaloa, Mexico, is a haven for Mexican crime bosses. A notorious gang, known as MS-13, rules parts of El Salvador and is spreading throughout Central America. Huge soybean and sugar cane plantations are denuding the Brazilian Cerrado, a dry grassland, washing pesticides down into Pantanal rivers and potentially severing the route to the Amazon. Then there’s the proposed eight-lane highway that would run from Honduras to El Salvador, linking Pacific and Caribbean ports. “I can almost guarantee you that it’ll stop the passage of jaguars, just like the fence that we’re building along the southern U.S. border,” says Panthera’s Quigley. There hasn’t been a breeding population in the United States in 50 years, but at least four jaguars were spotted in Arizona and New Mexico in recent years. Only one jaguar has been seen in Arizona since the fence was erected.
Still, he adds, roads can be made less deadly by limiting the number of lanes and incorporating wildlife-friendly underpasses like those used in Florida to protect panthers and other wildlife.
Rabinowitz is encouraged that in some places, jaguars are gaining support. In Belize, where jaguars serve increasingly as an attraction for ecotourists, Maya who once killed the animals are now their protectors. “It’s not born-again enlightenment,” says Rabinowitz. “It’s economics.” Jaguar tourism is also bringing money into the Pantanal. Carmindo Aleixo Da Costa, a 63-year-old rancher, says that hosting a few foreign tourists doubles his annual income. “Now is the time of the jaguar!” he says, beaming.
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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