Mexico's Jaguar Population Is up 30% Since 2010, but Still at ...
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6 Articles
Mexico's jaguar population is up 30% since 2010, but still at risk
MEXICO CITY - Mexico's jaguar population has increased significantly in recent years but the largest feline in the Americas is still in danger of extinction, said a Mexican advocacy group that released a national census of the animals on Wednesday. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Over the past six years, specimens have increased by 10 per cent, although the threat of habitat destruction persists.
The Jaguar population in Mexico has increased significantly in recent years, but the largest predatory cat in America is still threatened with extinction. This was reported by a Mexican interest group, which published a national census of the animals on Wednesday (27). According to this, the population in 2024 amounted to 5,326 jaguars, 30% more than in 2010, when Mexico [...] The post Mexico's Jaguar population has increased by 30 percent since…
The presence of jaguar, a species in danger of extinction, increased 10 percent in the last six years in Mexican territory, according to a census carried out by the National Alliance for the Conservation of Jaguar. “The great news is that there are more jaguars than in 2018, there are more jaguars than in 2010, there are five thousand 300 jaguars, which is an increase of approximately 10 percent of the population of 2018,” said Gerardo Ceballos …
Illegal trafficking in skins, skulls, claws and fangs is a real threat to the feline.
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