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Check Out These Seven Amazing Jaguar Facts
Republished with permission from GoEco
Costa Rica’s jaguars are both mighty and mysterious. What we know about these unique big cats is fascinating. What we don’t know might be even more intriguing. GoEco’s Jaguar Research and Conservation program aims to uncover this big cat’s secrets — there is still a lot to learn.
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Check out these seven amazing jaguar facts:
1. Jaguars love to swim — and fish
Unlike most other big cats, jaguars love the water. They can swim impressive distances and have been known to cross the Panama Canal. They also play, bathe, and hunt in and around rivers, pouncing on fish in pools and streams. In fact, legend has it that jaguars love fishing so much that they sometimes dangle the tip of their tail in the water, using it like a fishing line to lure in their aquatic prey.
2. Jaguars are famous for their one-strike hunting style
The name “jaguar” comes from “yaguar,” a native American word meaning “he who kills with one leap.” For centuries, jaguars have instilled fear and respect in people due to their powerful hunting tactics. The cats are efficient climbers and happily scale trees before pouncing down on their prey and killing with one skull-crushing bite. The jaguar’s size, along with its powerful teeth, jaws, and claws mean they are efficient hunters who will eat anything from crocodiles to snakes and monkeys. Their hunting style is distinct, as while most other big cats go for the throat when going in for the kill, jaguars will use their mighty jaws to clamp down on their prey’s skull.
3. Jaguars are the third biggest cat In the world
The jaguar’s size is impressive. They are the largest big cat after the tiger and lion, and are the biggest cat in the Americas. Male jaguars can measure up to two meters from their nose to the tip of their tail and weigh up to 95 kilograms. They also stand as high as 76 centimeters at the shoulder. However, their tail is the shortest out of all the big cats, as their sturdy frames are built more for climbing than speed.
4. Black panthers are actually black jaguars
All-black jaguars are more commonly known as panthers. The black coat is caused by a melanistic gene which can also appear in leopards. The great black cats thrive deep in the rainforest, where their dark coats help them blend in with the shadows. Black jaguars are a rare and truly spectacular sight. Only around 6% of jaguars in South America are born with a black coat.
5. Jaguars are classified as near threatened
Once upon a time, jaguars roamed from the southern tip of South America all the way up to the border between the United States and Mexico. Now, these big cats are found only in pockets of rainforest in remote parts of South and Central America. Jaguar populations in the Americas have dropped from 400,000 to 14,000 over the past century.
They are efficient hunters who will eat anything from crocodiles to snakes and monkeys.