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KidsPost Jaguar family’s release in Argentina is a step toward bringing back an important predator. Conservation groups’ captive-breeding program aims to returning balance to the ecosystem.
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Killing of jaguar pushes species’ survival in Argentina’s Gran Chaco to the brink - MSNIn late July or early August (the exact date is uncertain), a jaguar was hunted and skinned near the community of Estanislao del Campo, in Argentina’s northern department of Patiño, Formosa ...
CNN’s Bill Weir journeyed to Argentina to spend time with conservationist and former Patagonia CEO Kristine Tompkins as her team reached a milestone years in the making: rewilding a wild female ...
Conservationists first spotted a young male jaguar in 2022 roaming Argentina’s Formosa Nature Reserve. Camera traps later recorded the same individual in a forest tens of kilometers away, within ...
For about 70 years, jaguars were absent from Iberá Park in northeastern Argentina’s Corrientes province. To rectify this, conservationists reintroduced three jaguars into the park in 2021 ...
Only 200 to 250 jaguars live in Argentina today, occupying just 5 per cent of the territory they once roamed in. Loading Twitter content They are the continent's largest big cat.
CNN’s Bill Weir witnesses a moment years in the making, as Rewilding Argentina and Tompkins Conservation, led by former Patagonia CEO Kristine Tompkins, take the next steps to release a female ...
Rewilding Argentina Foundation/Handout via REUTERS [1/4] Two jaguar (Panthera onca) cubs born in semi-captivity are pictured at the Impenetrable National Park in Chaco, Argentina November 2, 2022.
Conservationists in Argentina are celebrating after spotting jaguar cubs on a hidden camera, the first jaguar birth in the park in 70 years. Hurricane-prone states The day in pictures Get the USA ...
Kris Tompkins carefully feeds a jaguar at the jaguar reintroduction center in Iberá National Park, Argentina, October 2024. Julian Quinones/CNN Tompkins wants to rewild the Americas.
CNN’s Bill Weir journeyed to Argentina to spend time with conservationist and former Patagonia CEO Kristine Tompkins as her team reached a milestone years in the making: rewilding a wild female ...
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