PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Beyond words: From jaguar population trends to conservation and public policy in Mexico.

  • Gerardo Ceballos,
  • Heliot Zarza,
  • José F González-Maya,
  • J Antonio de la Torre,
  • Andrés Arias-Alzate,
  • Carlos Alcerreca,
  • Horacio V Barcenas,
  • Gerardo Carreón-Arroyo,
  • Cuauhtémoc Chávez,
  • Carlos Cruz,
  • Daniela Medellín,
  • Andres García,
  • Marco Antonio-García,
  • Marco A Lazcano-Barrero,
  • Rodrigo A Medellín,
  • Oscar Moctezuma-Orozco,
  • Fernando Ruiz,
  • Yamel Rubio,
  • Victor H Luja,
  • Erik Joaquín Torres-Romero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255555
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. e0255555

Abstract

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The jaguar (Panthera onca) is one of the most threatened carnivores in the Americas. Despite a long history of research on this charismatic species, to date there have been few systematic efforts to assess its population size and status in most countries across its distribution range. We present here the results of the two National Jaguar Surveys for Mexico, the first national censuses in any country within the species distribution. We estimated jaguar densities from field data collected at 13 localities in 2008-2010 (2010 hereafter) and 11 localities in 2016-2018 (2018 hereafter). We used the 2010 census results as the basis to develop a National Jaguar Conservation Strategy that identified critical issues for jaguar conservation in Mexico. We worked with the Mexican government to implement the conservation strategy and then evaluated its effectivity. To compare the 2010 and 2018 results, we estimated the amount of jaguar-suitable habitat in the entire country based on an ecological niche model for both periods. Suitable jaguar habitat covered ~267,063 km2 (13.9% of the country's territory) in 2010 and ~ 288,890 km2 (~14.8% of the country's territory) in 2018. Using the most conservative density values for each priority region, we estimated jaguar densities for both the high and low suitable habitats. The total jaguar population was estimated in ~4,000 individuals for 2010 census and ~4,800 for the 2018 census. The Yucatan Peninsula was the region with the largest population, around 2000 jaguars, in both censuses. Our promising results indicate that the actions we proposed in the National Jaguar Conservation Strategy, some of which have been implemented working together with the Federal Government, other NGO's, and land owners, are improving jaguar conservation in Mexico. The continuation of surveys and monitoring programs of the jaguar populations in Mexico will provide accurate information to design and implement effective, science-based conservation measures to try to ensure that robust jaguar populations remain a permanent fixture of Mexico's natural heritage.