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In Arizona and New Mexico, a state-led Jaguar Conservation Team (JAGCT) is working to protect and conserve a species that many people do not even know is native to the United States.
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www.azgfd.gov/w_c/es/jaguar_management.shtml
www.azgfd.gov/w_c/es/jaguar_management.shtml
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The Arizona Game and Fish Department has posted on its Web site (above) a videotaped copy of a news conference held on Thursday, March 5 in Tucson with its partners to provide more information and answer questions on the recently collared jaguar in southern Arizona. ... Arizona Jaguar News Conference Video...
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www.azgfd.gov/video/ArizonaJaguarPressConference.shtml
www.azgfd.gov/video/ArizonaJaguarPressConference.shtml
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A jaguar captured recently during an Arizona Game and Fish Department research study was fitted with a tracking collar and released. Jaguars were once thought to be extinct in the U.S., and researchers were hopeful that following the big cat's... ... Observing the jaguar in the wild, ... The Arizona Daily Star reported:
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latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2009/03/jaguar-macho...
latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2009/03/jaguar-macho-b.html
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The satellite tracking collar fitted onto a jaguar recently captured, collared and released in Arizona is already providing biologists with a better understanding of the big cat's habits and patterns. The Arizona Game and Fish Department has also confirmed that... ... Outdoors, action, adventure ... February 24, 2009 | 4:08 pm...
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latimesblogs.latimes.com/outposts/2009/02/jaguar-update...
latimesblogs.latimes.com/outposts/2009/02/jaguar-update-c.html
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A young male jaguar has been photographed south of Tucson, according to Arizona Game and Fish Department officials. The photograph was taken by a surveillance camera that was monitoring potential jaguar travel corridors on the Arizona/Mexico border.
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www.westernhunter.com/Pages/Vol04Issue02/azjag.html
www.westernhunter.com/Pages/Vol04Issue02/azjag.html
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The Jaguar (Panthera Onca) was listed on the endangered species list on July 22, ... Jaguars prefer heavy forest and swamps that provide cover and give them an access to water. Jaguars in the past have ranged from Southwestern to Southeastern United States. Today, they are only found in Arizona. Jaguars are nocturnal,
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research.biology.arizona.edu/mosquito/willott/323/proje...
research.biology.arizona.edu/mosquito/willott/323/project/endcats/jaguar.html
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At least 60 jaguars were killed in Arizona and New Mexico in the 20th century, including two in the Rincon and Catalina mountains in 1902. A female jaguar was shot as far north as the Grand Canyon in 1932, but the last female recorded in Arizona was in 1963 in the White Mountains.
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www.mjhinton.com/wild/000917.htm
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The Department of Fish and Game in Arizona captured a jaguar south Of Tucson, Arizona and fitted it with a GPS radio collar. The jaguar, a well-documented male named ‘Macho’, is the first in the US to be fitted with such a collar, providing frequent updates on its movements. ... Central America agrees to jaguar corridor;
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news.mongabay.com/2009/0218-hance_arizonajaguar.html
news.mongabay.com/2009/0218-hance_arizonajaguar.html
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It's certain that at least one jaguar has been able to make a living in Southern Arizona since 2001, said Bill Van Pelt, head of the Game and Fish Department's non-game mammals program. But a true population would have yielded more photos, and there still is no evidence of female jaguars north of the border, he said.
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www.twp.org/cms/page1156.cfm
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