The cat was one of only two known jaguars known to be roaming the US, and part of a group of three to be detected in the last three years, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.However, a photo released Thursday shows what experts identified to be a pelt with markings that match Yo’oko, meaning someone likely killed and skinned the rare cat.
The pattern of rosettes on a jaguar is unique, which allows specific individuals to be identified.”This tragedy is piercing,” Randy Serraglio, a conservation advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement Friday. “It highlights the urgency to protect jaguar habitat on both sides of the border and ensure that these rare, beautiful cats have safe places to live.”Jaguars — the third-largest cats in the world after tigers and lions — once lived throughout the Southwest, but they disappeared over the past 150 years, victims to habitat loss and predator control programs intended to protect livestock, researchers say. But they have been making minor and periodic inroads back into the Arizona region via Mexico, with seven jaguars having been confirmed in the US by photographs over the past 20 years.
The killing could have also occurred months ago, as Yo’oko had not been detected in the US since last year, Serraglio told BuzzFeed News.
The elusive jaguars have been spotted over the years via a series of remote trail cameras set up by federal wildlife officials and researchers.
Yo’oko had been photographed just north of the border several times in late 2016 and 2017, showing up regularly on trail cameras monitored by wildlife biologists and volunteers.One of the most significant gets for researchers came in 2016 when a video camera captured rare footage of a large male jaguar wandering the Santa Rita Mountains just outside Tucson, Arizona. At the time, the cat — dubbed “El Jeffe,” or Spanish for “the boss” — was the only known jaguar to be roaming inside the US.
Original source: https://www.buzzfeed.com/jasonwells/jaguar-us-killed-skinned.