
The Mesoamerican hotspot is home to a tremendous variety of wildlife and
biological diversity. While protecting these species’ habitat through
conservation leases is an important first step, ongoing wildlife research
is also a powerful conservation tool. By researching the needs and characteristics
of different species, Rainforest2Reef can offer persuasive evidence for
better conservation and guidance on crafting effective conservation actions.
Currently, Rainforest2Reef focuses our wildlife research
on two areas: jaguars and migratory birds.
Jaguar
research
Jaguars are only found in the Western Hemisphere, and
have already lost two thirds of their habitat in Mexico and Central America.
As its rainforest dwindles and threats like man-made habitat loss and
fragmentation, agriculture, urbanization and illegal hunting increase,
the jaguars’ numbers are going down. As of today only an estimated
15,000 jaguars remain in the wild, 6,000 of which live in North and Central
America.
The Calakmul Biosphere Reserve within the Selva Maya
rainforest is one of the last habitats large enough to sustain a viable
jaguar population, and the preservation of this habitat is one of the
central reasons for the founding of Rainforest2Reef.
Of all the large cats of the world, jaguars are ecologically
the least known. Better understanding of the jaguar will be critical to
any and all conservation efforts, and so Rainforest2Reef is promoting
a number of research efforts on this majestic animal.
What we’ve learned so far: Habitat needs
of the jaguar
Rainforest2Reef partner the National Autonomous University
of Mexico (UNAM) has been tracking and radio collaring jaguars within
the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve for 10 years. In these studies, we have
gained valuable insight into how much undisturbed habitat is needed
to maintain a viable jaguar population.
Through this research, we have found that, in the entire Western Hemisphere,
only the rainforests of Mexico and Guatemala are large enough to maintain
a jaguar population larger than 400 individuals. We have also discovered
interesting characteristics of the jaguar’s use of this habitat,
namely that within each individual’s home-range, jaguars live
and forage in a small sub-area of this range for periods of 7-10 days
and then move on to another small area with an abundance of new prey.
This continuous movement permits the hunter to take advantage of the
entire home range without decreasing the abundance of prey populations.
Already, these results are guiding Rainforest2Reef’s
conservation efforts. Thanks to these studies, we now know that any
strategy for the long-term maintenance of a jaguar population must consider
the size and connectivity of reserves as well as the minimum population
size of jaguars in specific reserves.
Trivia and Additional Resources
Some interesting facts about the jaguar…
- Size: The jaguar is the third largest feline
in the world, after tigers and lions, and the largest feline in
the Americas.
- The jaguar’s name: The word “jaguar”
comes from the word “yaguara”, which in Guarani (the
languages of the Guarani Indians in South America) and means “beast
that kills with one leap.”
- Lifespan: Wild jaguars can live between 12 and
16 years. Jaguars in captivity live up to 20 years.
- Offspring: The average litter size is one to
four cubs. Cubs remain with their mothers for two years.
- Prey: The jaguar prey base is diverse, including
such species as peccaries (wild pigs), capybaras (large rodents),
deer, sloths, caymans, tapirs, freshwater fish and smaller animals.
They occasionally prey on domestic livestock, a reason why they
are targeted by ranchers.
- Roar: Click here to hear a jaguar sound:
http://www.partnersinrhyme.com/soundfx/animals/BigCats.shtml
Want to learn more about the jaguar? Check out these
informative sites…
Bird
research
The Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, an area within the Selva
Maya rainforest, is an extremely important bird habitat. At last count,
over 350 species of birds either inhabit or migrate through this land.
This represents 33% of all bird species in Mexico. Due to man-made
threats and habitat loss, over 100 of these bird populations are currently
considered endangered.
Because conserving habitat for birds must address migratory
habitats even outside of the rainforest, Rainforest2Reef is exploring
innovative partnerships and programs in order to more effectively understand
and preserve these bird populations.
From New Jersey to the Yucatan, a partnership
for migratory birds
Of the over 350 bird species that have been identified
within the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve of the Selva Maya rainforest,
60% of these are migratory and many of these birds spend their summers
in the US.
In a groundbreaking conservation partnership, Rainforest2Reef
is working with New Jersey’s D&R
Greenway Land Trust to preserve a flyway used by over 60 bird species
that winter in the rainforests of the Yucatan and breed in New Jersey.
Together we aim to build a research station within the Reserve that
will promote sound research and understanding of birds like cedar waxwings,
ovenbirds, rose-breasted grosbeaks, indigo buntings and Baltimore orioles.
Expanding our bird monitoring efforts
In the coming years we intend to undertake a bird research
and monitoring program with the objective of developing strategies for
the management and conservation of the 356 bird species found in the
Yucatan region. The main goal of the program is to determine their
habitat requirements and the effects that human activities are having
on bird species. By expanding our bird monitoring program we hope to
inform a regional long-term strategy for protecting an ecological corridor
connecting the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve to other protected areas in
Guatemala to the south.
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