Rare Arizona jaguar roams mountains near Tucson
- Updated
A remote sensor camera run by Conservation CATalyst and the Center for Biological Diversity shows a jaguar roaming the Santa Rita Mountains near Tucson. The groups say this is the first publicly released video of the jaguar, named El Jefe, who is the only known wild jaguar in the United States.
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Remote sensor cameras record footage of "El Jefe" roaming the Santa Rita Mountains.
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More information
- Enviro group prepared to sue over Rosemont biological opinion
- Steller: Jaguars belong in Southern Arizona, whatever the number
- Another jaguar discovery in Southern Arizona adds to border-wall debate
- Environmental groups say more research is needed on reintroducing jaguars to Southwest
- Feds want to ease jaguar protections to build border wall
- Another big deposit of copper suspected just outside planned Rosemont mine
- Video of Chiricahua jaguar 'Sombra' released by environmental group
- Tucson lawsuit seeks to protect jaguars from Rosemont Mine
- Endangered topminnow's return to Santa Cruz River in Tucson is a big step to recovery
- Tribes sue feds over Rosemont Mine, citing 'irreversible' damage to sacred sites
- Some research suggests jaguars are declining in Sonora amid killings, habitat loss
- Jaguar that roamed Huachuca Mountains shown dead in photo, officials say
- Rosemont Mine's impacts on endangered jaguar still hotly debated by federal officials
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