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Jaguar photographed for the first time in Central Mexico mongabay.com February 11, 2009
"We obtained three photographs of a male, and ten of the 132 excrement samples found have been attributed to the jaguar," said Octavio Monroy-Vilchis, a researcher at UAEM and lead author of the study, the results of which are published in The Southwestern Naturalist. "The photographs provide information about new recording sites, and allow us to deduce that the area where the animal was observed may be a corridor connecting jaguar populations."
Despite the pictures, the researchers have still yet to see the animal. "The lack of evidence highlights the fact that the jaguar is more elusive than other felines, and that its presence in the area is sporadic - possibly because it has access to other resources near to Michoacán and Guerrero," said Monroy-Vilchis. Monroy-Vilchis, O; Sánchez, O; Aguilera-Reyes, U; Suárez, P; Urios, V. “Jaguar (Panthera onca) in the State of Mexico” Southwestern Naturalist, 53(4): 533-537 diciembre de 2008. SHARE THIS ARTICLE:
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