BBC Wildlife Magazine

Far from the average jaguar

A high-fish diet is enough to turn these prowling loners into sociable team workers

- Stuart Blackman

Jaguars are classic aloof, solitary carnivores. Like most other big cats, they come together only for courtship and territoria­l disputes. But not in the wetlands of the Brazilian Pantanal where a shift in diet has led to striking changes in their social organisati­on. The Pantanal is the world’s largest tropical wetland. Biologists have been using a combinatio­n of scat analysis, radio tracking and camera traps to study the behaviour of jaguars in a remote region lacking roads and human settlement­s.

The results, published in

Ecology, reveal a density of jaguars about double that found elsewhere. Not only are they more plentiful, but they are more sociable, too. Their home ranges overlap considerab­ly and they spend time travelling, hunting and playing together. Two males were caught on camera playing together for 30 minutes.

The biologists suggest that the breakdown of hostilitie­s is a consequenc­e of an unusual diet. Most jaguars are reliant on terrestria­l mammalian prey. But in the wetlands, aquatic food, such as turtles and caiman, is plentiful. Fish – including piranha – comprised nearly 50 per cent of their diet. “As far as we know, this is the most piscivorou­s diet of any large felid,” write the biologists.

“If there is a lot of food around, there is less of a need to fight over it,” says Oregon State University’s Charlotte Eriksson. “We don’t know whether it is just the high abundance of prey that has contribute­d to the high jaguar density, or if an aquatic diet has specific physiologi­cal benefits to jaguars,” she adds.

For now, Eriksson and her colleagues are studying the effects of wildfires on jaguars and their prey. “Catastroph­ic wildfires burned over a third of the entire Pantanal biome last year, including a large portion of our study area,” says Eriksson. “Assessing how jaguars and their prey respond to fire will be critical to project the impacts of climate change and to conserve viable population­s.”

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 ?? ?? In Brazil's wetlands, jaguars are exhibiting surprising­ly gregarious behaviour as biologists catch them playing and hunting together Left: Charlotte Eriksson is the lead author of the jaguar study
In Brazil's wetlands, jaguars are exhibiting surprising­ly gregarious behaviour as biologists catch them playing and hunting together Left: Charlotte Eriksson is the lead author of the jaguar study

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