Arizona Jaguars

Moderator: HAZ - Moderators

 Linked Guides none
 Linked Area, etc none
User avatar
chumley
Guides: 94 | Official Routes: 241
Triplogs Last: 6 d | RS: 65
Water Reports 1Y: 78 | Last: 7 d
Joined: Sep 18 2002 8:59 am
City, State: Tempe, AZ

Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

With all the negative news about budget cuts and closing of state parks, its good to know that our lottery dollars support cool programs like this one. I think Jaguars are the coolest cats out there, and while amazingly beautiful, I'm pretty sure I'd crap my pants if I ever encountered one in the wild. :o

From AZGFD:
Arizona Game and Fish collars first wild jaguar in United States
News Media
Feb 19, 2009

Jaguar conservation has just experienced an exciting development with the capture and collaring of the first wild jaguar in Arizona by the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

The male cat was incidentally captured yesterday in an area southwest of Tucson during a research study aimed at monitoring habitat connectivity for mountain lions and black bears. While individual jaguars have been photographed sporadically in the borderland area of the state over the past years, the area where this animal was captured was outside of the area where the last known jaguar photograph was taken in January.

The jaguar was fitted with a satellite tracking collar and then released. The collar will provide biologists with location points every three hours. Early tracking indicates that the cat is doing well and has already travelled more than three miles from the capture site.

The data produced by the collar will shed light on a little-studied population segment of this species that uses southern Arizona and New Mexico as the northern extent of its range.

“While we didn’t set out to collar a jaguar as part of the mountain lion and bear research project, we took advantage of an important opportunity,” says Terry Johnson, endangered species coordinator for the Arizona Game and Fish Department. “More than 10 years ago, Game and Fish attempted to collar a jaguar with no success. Since then, we’ve established handling protocols in case we inadvertently captured a jaguar in the course of one of our other wildlife management activities.”

The jaguar plan, which was created in consultation with other leading jaguar experts, includes a protocol for capture, sedation and handling in the event a cat was captured.

Biologists are currently working on an identification analysis to determine if the collared jaguar is Macho B, a male cat that has been photographed by trail cameras periodically over the past 13 years.

The collared jaguar weighed in at 118 pounds with a thick and solid build. Field biologists’ assessment shows the cat appeared to be healthy and hardy.

The species has been protected outside of the United States under the Endangered Species Act since 1973. That protection was extended to jaguars within the U.S. in 1997, the year after their presence in the Arizona and New Mexico borderlands was confirmed.

"We issued a permit under the Endangered Species Act to radio collar a jaguar if the opportunity presented itself," said Steve Spangle, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Arizona field supervisor. "Gathering habitat use information and learning whether and how the cat is moving in and out of the United States may be essential to jaguar conservation at the northern edge of their range."

In 1997, a team was established in Arizona and New Mexico to protect and conserve the species. The Jaguar Conservation Team (JCT) began working with Mexico two years later, recognizing that the presence of jaguars in the United States depends on the conservation of the species in Mexico.

Trail cameras and field monitoring are carried out by the Borderlands Jaguar Detection Project, a group that works in cooperation with the JCT.

Jaguars once ranged from southern South America through Central America and Mexico and into the southern United States. By the late 1900s, jaguars were thought to be gone from the U.S. landscape, but two independent sightings in 1996 confirmed that jaguars still used Arizona and New Mexico as part of the northern most extent of its range.

Jaguars are the only cat in North America that roars. They prey on a variety of mammals, fish, birds and reptiles. Individuals in the northern population weigh between 80-120 pounds. Females breed year-round and have litters of one to four cubs that stay with their mother for nearly two years.

This conservation effort is funded in part by the Heritage Fund and Indian gaming revenue. Started in 1990, the Heritage Fund was established by Arizona voters to further conservation efforts in the state including protecting endangered species, educating our children about wildlife, helping urban residents to better coexist with wildlife and creating new opportunities for outdoor recreation. Funding comes from Arizona Lottery ticket sales.
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
JimmyLyding
Guides: 111 | Official Routes: 94
Triplogs Last: 540 d | RS: 0
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,111 d
Joined: Feb 16 2007 3:17 pm
City, State: Walnut Creek, CA

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JimmyLyding »

It's very likely that the only jaguars in Arizona (if there are any) are all males. Like mountain lions young male jaguars are pushed out of the area where they were born and raised by adult male jaguars. Females are more likely to establish themselves near where they were born and raised. The nearest known breeding population is in Sonora, Mexico. Check out northernjaguarproject.org if you're looking for more. It's not real current, but still a very cool website.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
chumley
Guides: 94 | Official Routes: 241
Triplogs Last: 6 d | RS: 65
Water Reports 1Y: 78 | Last: 7 d
Joined: Sep 18 2002 8:59 am
City, State: Tempe, AZ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

Just saw this on AZCentral tonight. Not really sure what to think, but it certainly raises a question or two:
TUCSON, Ariz. - A jaguar captured from the wild and euthanized may not have had chronic kidney failure after all, according to the University of Arizona's Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory.

After reviewing tissue samples, pathologist Sharon Dial of the laboratory said authorities may have moved too fast to euthanize the jaguar earlier this month.

Arizona Game and Fish officials had said the jaguar, named Macho B, had "off-the-charts" kidney failure, while Dial said the animal's bloodwork actually could have indicated dehydration.

Dial said the Phoenix Zoo, where the big cat had been taken, should have kept Macho B on intravenous fluids for 24 to 48 hours before euthanizing it. State Game and Fish officials and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials agreed to euthanize the animal about five hours after he first got fluids. Zoo officials made the recommendation based on blood test results.

Dial said it is unproven "dogma" among some medical experts that blood levels alone can be used to "make a definitive statement that this animal will not survive."

"Nothing is absolute. There is nothing to say that he absolutely would have recovered, but I can say by looking at the kidneys that there is no structural reason why he would not have," Dial said. "I've looked at a lot of cat kidneys, not jaguar kidneys. For a supposed 15-year-old cat, he had damned good looking kidneys."

Pathology resident Jennifer Johnson said it's possible Macho B had short-term, acute kidney failure that didn't show up in the tissues.

But the lack of signs of chronic kidney failure in those tissues probably means the jaguar didn't have kidney failure at the time he was captured in mid-February.

"Animals with chronic renal failure usually don't have their coats in good shape," Johnson said "They start to develop muscle wasting or atrophy. They do not look healthy and hardy."

Shortly after the jaguar's death, Phoenix Zoo veterinarian Dean Rice said the animal probably had kidney failure when he was initially captured that would have killed him within two months - although the capture probably aggravated the condition.

Macho B's death came 12 days after its original capture in the oak woodlands of Southern Arizona, near the Mexican border. Officials said the jaguar was snared accidentally by a research project tracking the movements of mountain lions and bears. He was fitted with a radio collar and released.

But researchers tracking its movements by satellite data noticed he had slowed down significantly, had an abnormal gait and had lost weight. They recaptured it March 2 and took it to the Phoenix Zoo, where it was euthanized later that day.

A federal wildlife lab in Madison, Wis., also is analyzing the cat's tissue samples. Both labs' conclusions and the tissues will go to Linda Munson, a specialist on large cats and a professor at the University of California-Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. She has agreed to review the data at no charge to the state.

"We encourage a full review of each and every part of the data, so we can provide the most complete review of what took place," said Terry Johnson, Game and Fish's endangered-species coordinator.

Once all that is done, Game and Fish will post all the findings on its Web site, officials said.

Until all three reports are in, it is "unproductive and potentially irresponsible" to discuss one piece of the findings individually, Game and Fish said in a statement.

"It is outrageous, unprofessional and speculative of individuals from the Arizona Veterinary Diagnostic Lab not leading the case to comment and offer opinions based on very incomplete information," the statement said. "Those individuals from the vet diagnostic lab had no involvement with the evaluation and treatment of Macho B when he was alive, and so their comments are not valid or appropriate."
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
azbackpackr
Guides: 27 | Official Routes: 23
Triplogs Last: 78 d | RS: 0
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 770 d
Joined: Jan 21 2006 6:46 am
City, State: Eagar AZ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azbackpackr »

Uh, oh.
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
big_load
Guides: 0 | Official Routes: 1
Triplogs Last: 595 d | RS: 3
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,483 d
Joined: Oct 28 2003 11:20 am
City, State: Andover, NJ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by big_load »

Yikes! That's some bad publicity. Regardless of the final determination, I'd hate to be those guys.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
azhiker96
Triplogs Last: 947 d | RS: 2
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
Joined: Feb 03 2002 10:17 am
City, State: Gilbert, AZ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azhiker96 »

Why are they so quick to kill animals anyway? We need kitty hospice. If he's hurting just give him a little morphine until he purrs. ;)
"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it."
~ Mark Twain
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
azdesertfather
Guides: 16 | Official Routes: 22
Triplogs Last: 2 d | RS: 18
Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 99 d
Joined: Apr 30 2008 9:57 am
City, State: Tucson, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

good grief! these vets can't tell the difference between dehydration and "off the charts" kidney failure???!!! ](*,)
UGH
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
JimmyLyding
Guides: 111 | Official Routes: 94
Triplogs Last: 540 d | RS: 0
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,111 d
Joined: Feb 16 2007 3:17 pm
City, State: Walnut Creek, CA

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JimmyLyding »

Good news for Arizona jaguars and the habitat they need:



<<Published: 03.31.2009 in the Arizona Daily Star

Judge in Tucson orders fed to prepare jaguar recovery plan
By Tony Davis
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
A federal judge overruled an agency’s decision today that had stopped preparation of a recovery plan and designation of prime protected habitat for the endangered jaguar in the Southwest.
District Judge John Roll’s ruling essentially said that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had failed to prove its case that the jaguar is primarily a foreign species and that there is no important habitat for it in Arizona and New Mexico. Roll ordered the service to return on January 8 of next year with a new decision on critical habitat and a recovery plan.
The ruling is a big victory for the Center for Biological Diversity, which had filed suit challenging service decisions on both issues, and the Defenders of Wildlife, that had sued against the recovery plan decision only.
“The Bush Administration decision to deny a jaguar recovery plan and critical habitat was not based on science, is what the judge found,” said Michael Robinson, an activist for the Center for Biological Diversity. “The court confirmed what we’ve known all along: the jaguar needs a home in the United States and a lifeboat-- a recovery plan and critical habitat.”
“The jaguar is an iconic species of our Southwest. The Fish and Wildlife Service was willing to basically write it off because there are so few jaguars left in this country,” said Brian Segee, an attorney with Defenders of Wildlife. “The United States is the jaguar’s home, and we should take the actions necessary for it to recover here. We are thrilled with the court's decision and hope the Fish and Wildlife Service will now move quickly to initiate recovery planning and provide the jaguar with the full Endangered Species Act protections.”
As of late this morning, the service had not yet commented on the decision. Under the law, it has a choice to appeal or comply with the court’s ruling to prepare a recovery plan and designate critical habitat.>>

The environmentalist in me loves the idea of setting aside large swaths of habitat in Southeastern AZ for jaguar recovery :D
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
big_load
Guides: 0 | Official Routes: 1
Triplogs Last: 595 d | RS: 3
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,483 d
Joined: Oct 28 2003 11:20 am
City, State: Andover, NJ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by big_load »

JamesLyding wrote:The environmentalist in me loves the idea of setting aside large swaths of habitat in Southeastern AZ for jaguar recovery
Yeah, but the part of me that tastes like chicken is a little nervous. :scared:
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
PaleoRob
Guides: 171 | Official Routes: 78
Triplogs Last: 444 d | RS: 24
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 831 d
Joined: Apr 03 2006 12:21 pm
City, State: Pocatello, ID
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

Hmm! Interesting reading there.
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
writelots
Guides: 19 | Official Routes: 3
Triplogs Last: 1,162 d | RS: 3
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 1,161 d
Joined: Nov 22 2005 2:20 pm
City, State: Tucson, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by writelots »

big_load wrote:
JamesLyding wrote:The environmentalist in me loves the idea of setting aside large swaths of habitat in Southeastern AZ for jaguar recovery
Yeah, but the part of me that tastes like chicken is a little nervous. :scared:
:sl:

I think it's a great idea - the though that just because we've chased out/hunted to extinction a species does not necessarily mean that they don't "really" belong here. All politics aside, it really is time for us to begin to embrace the idea that the natural world is not a resource intended soley for us to carve into consumable bits...
-----------------------------------
Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
PaleoRob
Guides: 171 | Official Routes: 78
Triplogs Last: 444 d | RS: 24
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 831 d
Joined: Apr 03 2006 12:21 pm
City, State: Pocatello, ID
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

Amen.
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
azdesertfather
Guides: 16 | Official Routes: 22
Triplogs Last: 2 d | RS: 18
Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 99 d
Joined: Apr 30 2008 9:57 am
City, State: Tucson, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

JamesLyding wrote:Good news for Arizona jaguars and the habitat they need:
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
A federal judge overruled an agency’s decision today that had stopped preparation of a recovery plan and designation of prime protected habitat for the endangered jaguar in the Southwest.
District Judge John Roll’s ruling essentially said that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had failed to prove its case that the jaguar is primarily a foreign species and that there is no important habitat for it in Arizona and New Mexico. Roll ordered the service to return on January 8 of next year with a new decision on critical habitat and a recovery plan.
What good is it to protect a "habitat" for a species that probably no longer exists now in Arizona anyway? Can they even get into AZ anymore, with all the fences across the border from Mexico? Hopefully you all will see this as nothing more than a rant, because there are some left to preserve. It seems to me though, "too little, too late."

OK, I'll get off my soap box now ;)
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
JimmyLyding
Guides: 111 | Official Routes: 94
Triplogs Last: 540 d | RS: 0
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,111 d
Joined: Feb 16 2007 3:17 pm
City, State: Walnut Creek, CA

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JimmyLyding »

<<What good is it to protect a "habitat" for a species that probably no longer exists now in Arizona anyway?>>
Well, there is that whole thing about protecting the habitat itself. I'm down with protecting jaguar habitat even if there are no jaguars there.

It looks like the AZ Game & Fish Dept. is about to get in really big trouble over the Macho B debacle. I won't copy/paste the article from this morning's AZ Daily Star (Tucson) because it's pretty long. Basically, it looks as if the Game & Fish Dept. was trying to snare a jaguar using female jaguar scat as bait. Problem is, the zoos that donated the scat wanted it to be used to lure jaguars into photographic range of the trailcams, not snares. There are e-mails that support this idea, but the G&F Dept. is denying that they were trying to snag a jaguar. The whistleblower is having her integrity called into question by a key G&F employee involved in the study, but it looks pretty bad for the G&F. Combine this with the fact that the decision to euthanize Macho B is also being called into question, and what looked like a boon for the AZ Game & Fish Dept. is looking like a boondoggle. I'm just reporting what I read in the story, but it could turn out to be just as the G&F Dept. claims. I'm sure we're going to read a lot more about this story in the near future.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
PaleoRob
Guides: 171 | Official Routes: 78
Triplogs Last: 444 d | RS: 24
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 831 d
Joined: Apr 03 2006 12:21 pm
City, State: Pocatello, ID
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by PaleoRob »

JamesLyding wrote: It looks like the AZ Game & Fish Dept. is about to get in really big trouble over the Macho B debacle. I won't copy/paste the article from this morning's AZ Daily Star (Tucson) because it's pretty long. Basically, it looks as if the Game & Fish Dept. was trying to snare a jaguar using female jaguar scat as bait. Problem is, the zoos that donated the scat wanted it to be used to lure jaguars into photographic range of the trailcams, not snares. There are e-mails that support this idea, but the G&F Dept. is denying that they were trying to snag a jaguar. The whistleblower is having her integrity called into question by a key G&F employee involved in the study, but it looks pretty bad for the G&F. Combine this with the fact that the decision to euthanize Macho B is also being called into question, and what looked like a boon for the AZ Game & Fish Dept. is looking like a boondoggle. I'm just reporting what I read in the story, but it could turn out to be just as the G&F Dept. claims. I'm sure we're going to read a lot more about this story in the near future.
Uh oh...
"The only thing we did was wrong was staying in the wilderness to long...the only thing we did was right was the day we started to fight..."
-Old Spiritual
My book, The Marauders on Lulu and Amazon
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
Vaporman
Guides: 3 | Official Routes: 0
Triplogs Last: 4,739 d | RS: 0
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: never
Joined: Mar 28 2005 4:10 pm
City, State: Gilbert, AZ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by Vaporman »

What a bunch of idiots! :x Why couldn't they just leave MachoB alone and let him be?
Yea, canyoneering is an extreme sport... EXTREMELY dramatic!!! =p
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
writelots
Guides: 19 | Official Routes: 3
Triplogs Last: 1,162 d | RS: 3
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 1,161 d
Joined: Nov 22 2005 2:20 pm
City, State: Tucson, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by writelots »

Man. I was defending them for the most part (them being Fish and Game). I mean, they've got a pretty rough job. But it sounds like they need to flounder for a while here and maybe have some important changes and perhaps re-alignments.

Gotta love the gubment... :doh:
-----------------------------------
Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.- Barack Obama
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
JoelHazelton
Guides: 16 | Official Routes: 1
Triplogs Last: 16 d | RS: 1
Water Reports 1Y: 2 | Last: 76 d
Joined: Mar 22 2006 7:45 am
City, State: Phoenix, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by JoelHazelton »

Vaporman wrote:What a bunch of idiots! :x Why couldn't they just leave MachoB alone and let him be?
Because then they wouldn't be meddling. If we didn't meddle in everything it wouldn't be human. Duh. :roll:
"Arizona is the land of contrast... You can go from Minnesota to California in a matter of minutes, then have Mexican food that night." -Jack Dykinga

http://www.joelhazelton.com
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
azdesertfather
Guides: 16 | Official Routes: 22
Triplogs Last: 2 d | RS: 18
Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 99 d
Joined: Apr 30 2008 9:57 am
City, State: Tucson, AZ
Contact:

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by azdesertfather »

Feds allege crime in death of wild jaguar in Ariz.
Jan 22, 2010, 12:05 AM EST

PHOENIX (AP) -- Investigators say a contractor and possibly an Arizona Game and Fish Department employee acted criminally in the death of what was believed to be the last living wild jaguar in Arizona.

The allegation is in a federal report obtained Thursday by The Associated Press.

The state says the male jaguar known as "Macho B" was unexpectedly caught in February in a snare trap. Officials attached a tracking collar and released him.

Two weeks later, researchers tracking the cat found he was acting abnormally and recaptured him. Veterinarians found that Macho B was in renal failure, determined the condition was irreversible and euthanized him.

The report says there is evidence the first capture was probably intentional and violated the Endangered Species Act.

The Game and Fish Department said Thursday it didn't direct any employee or contractor to capture a jaguar. It says it's cooperating with the investigation and conducting an internal probe.
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
big_load
Guides: 0 | Official Routes: 1
Triplogs Last: 595 d | RS: 3
Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,483 d
Joined: Oct 28 2003 11:20 am
City, State: Andover, NJ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by big_load »

It's about time.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
User avatar
chumley
Guides: 94 | Official Routes: 241
Triplogs Last: 6 d | RS: 65
Water Reports 1Y: 78 | Last: 7 d
Joined: Sep 18 2002 8:59 am
City, State: Tempe, AZ

Re: Arizona Jaguars

Post by chumley »

Arizona state employee fired over jaguar capture

Mar. 19, 2010 07:41 PM
Associated Press

PHOENIX - The Arizona Game and Fish Department has fired an employee based on results of an internal investigation into the capture and death of what was the only known wild jaguar in the U.S.

Officials said Friday that 40-year-old Thornton W. Smith was a field biologist and had been with the agency 12 years.

He was involved in the placement and monitoring of traps used in a black bear and mountain lion research project that resulted in the initial capture of the jaguar called "Macho B."

The cat was found snared in a Game and Fish trap on Feb. 18, 2009. It was recaptured due to health problems and euthanized less than two weeks later.

Game and Fish officials say Smith acknowledged that he misled federal investigators regarding facts surrounding the jaguar's original capture.
I'm not sure what my spirit animal is, but I'm confident it has rabies.
contribute to this member driven resource
ie: RS > Save/Share after hikes Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on the App Store Route Scout GPS Topo Mapper on Google Play
Post Reply

Return to “Fauna”