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A jaguar first caught on camera in 2023 has been spotted again in southern Arizona, but wildlife advocates worry that border ...
The new images were captured by cameras maintained by the University of Arizona and a team of citizen scientists.
The University of Arizona's Wild Cat Research and Conservation Center confirmed sightings south of Tucson, which they say is ...
A male jaguar has been spotted five times this summer in Southern Arizona, and the sighting comes as a border wall is being ...
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Jaguar spotted by U of A trail camerasA jaguar has been detected on trail cameras in Arizona, making it the fourth one observed by the University of Arizona's Wild ...
A team of scientists and volunteers at the University of Arizona’s Wild Cat Research and Conservation Center have recorded ...
TUCSON, AZ (3TV/CBS 5) — A wild jaguar seen roaming recently around southern Arizona may be a new sighting and not one previously identified by the state, according to a wildlife nonprofit.
These photos of a male jaguar were captured by a trail camera Jan. 6 in the Dos Cabezas-Chiricahua region of southern Arizona. Officials say it's the same jaguar photographed in past years.
TUCSON, Ariz.— A wild jaguar shown in a recent trail camera video from southern Arizona is a new jaguar not previously identified in the state. The images captured last month by a wildlife enthusiast ...
In a 2021 analysis of suitable jaguar habitat in Arizona and New Mexico, scientists identified 20 million acres from the U.S.-Mexico border to the Grand Canyon that could sustain a jaguar population.
A jaguar was spotted November 16, 2016, in the Dos Cabezas Mountains of Arizona, 60 miles from the Mexican border, the farthest north one of these animals has been spotted in many decades.
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