Jaguar is part of an exclusive group known as "Large Cat" including Lion, Tiger, Leopard. This kind of scientific name is Panthera Onca. Panthera is a Greek word from Latin Panther, Onca is derived from the Latin lynx. Most Central and South American countries call Jaguars "tigers" or tigers. This is the only large cat found in the New World (Western Hemisphere), the only large cat in the whole genus. The whole classification is categorized as follows: Kingdom - animal kingdom, pylorus - cordoid, class - mammal, eye - carnivore, family - feline, genus - pantheraceae, species - pantheraceae.
The Phantom (Panthera onca) is one of the most famous endangered species in South America - but for the same reason Jaguar is considered an animal in South America, and Jaguar historically lived in the south, the central and northern part It is easy to forget what it was. Native American countries: Jaguar's habitat began in Argentina and Central America and spread to various places in the southwestern United States including contemporary Arizona and New Mexico. Jaguar is officially considered to be threatened by the World Conservation Union for Nature and is not in danger and has been classified as such a jugger since 2002 but protection of Jaguar remains What
In 1972 the Endangered Species Protection Act lists Jaguars as endangered species under the Endangered Species Protection Act. Because the predator management program is very effective to keep Jaguar away from the landscape of the United States, that species is only listed on foreign endangered species, hence any federal protection in the United States Not. By a year after the two independent Jaguars witnessed in southern Arizona until 1997, the service sector expanded the dangerous condition of Jaguar within that range in this way. Southwestern part
It is a large wild cat of American origin. Due to habitat destruction and hunting, the population of Jaguar has fallen sufficiently to be included in the endangered species list in 1972. Still, poaching continues, Jaguar is still in danger, but a new protection law (hope) has been established to protect the extinct jaguar.
Humans are the main threat of Jaguar. If anything, Jaguar rarely attacks humans unless it is desperately forced. Human beings capture the movement of Jaguar, find skin, and protect domestic stocks. Jaguar is on the verge of extinction as fur is being hunted and farmers kill Jaguar as it killed their cows. As Jaguars are considered highly destructive to cattle and horses, the larger Mexican farms have "tiger hunters" to kill them or at least to drive them away. Due to the great demand for their jacket, poaching jaguars due to hunting are still a problem. Poaching still exists today, but it is not common as it used to be. In the 1960s and 1970s, about 18,000 Jaguars were killed each year for a beautiful coat. Previously valuable furs such as leopard, cheetah, jaguar and the like may no longer be hunted in their own countries, and imports are prohibited in many other countries.