Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Seeking a stable jaguar population

- DIANE JEANTET AND TATIANA POLLASTRI Diane Jeantet reported from Rio de Janeiro. AP reporter David Biller contribute­d from Rio de Janeiro.

JUNDIAI, Brazil — Brazilian and American scientists on Thursday tranquiliz­ed a wild-born female jaguar now living in a protected area in Sao Paulo state. They’re hoping the 110-pound feline named Bianca could make history for the second time in two years.

In 2019, Bianca gave birth to the first jaguar cub ever born from artificial inseminati­on. Now, the 8-year-old could once again advance the cause of preserving her species. That is, if all goes according to plan and she becomes pregnant using semen that is frozen.

Scientists say frozen semen would be easy to transport, and so help ensure genetic diversity of jaguars whose population­s are increasing­ly fragmented by habitat destructio­n, according to Lindsey Vansandt, a ther-iogenologi­st — a specialist in veterinary reproducti­ve medicine — at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.

“The population sort of becomes smaller and smaller, and then you get inbreeding which has lots of bad consequenc­es,” Vansandt told The Associated Press moments after performing the procedure on an unconsciou­s Bianca atop a surgery table.

“If we can take sperm from one male and inseminate a female from another location, we can keep their gene flow moving and keep the population more healthy,” Vansandt said.

Wildlife experts from the Cincinnati Zoo, the Federal University of Mato Grosso and the environmen­tal organizati­on Mata Ciliar have for years developed their inseminati­on program for the Western Hemisphere’s largest feline. They work with individual­s rescued from habitat loss in the Amazon rain forest, Cerrado savanna and Pantanal wetlands, all of which have suffered a surge of deforestat­ion and fires in recent years.

Some jaguars badly injured by blazes in the Pantanal last year required transport to specialize­d facilities for care. Others either died or were displaced.

“Look what happened in the Pantanal, the Cerrado,” said Cristina Adania, a veterinari­an and coordinato­r of Mata Ciliar. “They are being killed before we even get to treat them, so something has to be done.”

This year, a study published by wild cat conservati­on group Panthera, the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul and partners estimated that almost 1,500 jaguars were killed or displaced by fire and habitat loss in Brazil’s Amazon from 2016 to 2019.

Displaced jaguars are unlikely to thrive in new environmen­ts, which may be the range of another territoria­l individual, according to Panthera. Plus, they are unfamiliar with where best to find prey, which can leave them hunting livestock, putting them in ranchers’ crosshairs.

The Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature’s Red List classifies jaguars as “near threatened” — a grade above vulnerable — though their population is on the decline and their habitat “severely fragmented.”

Bianca was still a cub in the Amazon when she was rescued and delivered to Mata Ciliar. Like some of the wild-born cats living at the Brazilian Center for the Conservati­on of Neotropica­l Felines in Jundiai, she can’t be reintroduc­ed to the wild, Adania said. Another female jaguar at the facility, named Tabatinga, was also artificial­ly inseminate­d on Thursday.

Unfrozen jaguar semen only stays good for a few hours, Vansandt said. Frozen semen can be used for years, but typically has a lower success rate for felines than with humans.

If Bianca’s case is successful, it would remove the strain and stress of transporti­ng carnivores that weigh as much as 300 pounds to mate in person. Even when a jaguar is transporte­d, there’s no guarantee it will get along with its wouldbe mate, said Adania.

“This is good for genetic diversity, but also towards that larger goal of increasing the number of jaguars,” said Vansandt. “The dream is to increase the numbers to a stable population.”

 ?? (AP/Andre Penner) ?? Brazilian and U.S. researcher­s perform an artificial inseminati­on procedure on a jaguar Thursday at the Mata Ciliar Associatio­n conservati­on center in Jundiai, Brazil.
(AP/Andre Penner) Brazilian and U.S. researcher­s perform an artificial inseminati­on procedure on a jaguar Thursday at the Mata Ciliar Associatio­n conservati­on center in Jundiai, Brazil.
 ?? ?? A sedated jaguar is placed in a cage Thursday after undergoing an artificial inseminati­on procedure in Jundiai.
A sedated jaguar is placed in a cage Thursday after undergoing an artificial inseminati­on procedure in Jundiai.
 ?? ?? A sedated jaguar is carried to a waiting vehicle to transport her back to her habitat Thursday after undergoing an artificial inseminati­on procedure.
A sedated jaguar is carried to a waiting vehicle to transport her back to her habitat Thursday after undergoing an artificial inseminati­on procedure.
 ?? ?? A researcher holds the paw of a jaguar Thursday as it undergoes an artificial inseminati­on procedure.
A researcher holds the paw of a jaguar Thursday as it undergoes an artificial inseminati­on procedure.

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