Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Conservation Translocations: Getting Started
- Part II Conservation Translocations: The Key Issues
- Part III Conservation Translocations: Looking to the Future
- Part IV Case Studies
- 14 Reintroduction of the Endemic Plant Manglietiastrum sinicum (Magnoliaceae) to Yunnan Province, China
- 15 Applying Adaptive Management to Reintroductions of Pyne’s Ground-Plum Astragalus bibullatus
- 16 Five Reasons to Consider Long-Term Monitoring: Case Studies from Bird Reintroductions on Tiritiri Matangi Island
- 17 Multiple Reintroductions to Restore Ecological Interactions in a Defaunated Tropical Forest
- 18 Bringing Jaguars and Their Prey Base Back to the Iberá Wetlands, Argentina
- 19 The Return of the Eurasian Beaver to Britain: The Implications of Unplanned Releases and the Human Dimension
- 20 The Role of Community Engagement in Conservation Translocations: The South of Scotland Golden Eagle Project (SSGEP)
- 21 The European Native Oyster and the Challenges for Conservation Translocations: The Scottish Experience
- 22 Slow and Steady Wins the Race: Using Non-native Tortoises to Rewild Islands off Mauritius
- 23 Assisted Colonisation as a Conservation Tool: Tasmanian Devils and Maria Island
- Index
- Plates
18 - Bringing Jaguars and Their Prey Base Back to the Iberá Wetlands, Argentina
from Part IV - Case Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Conservation Translocations: Getting Started
- Part II Conservation Translocations: The Key Issues
- Part III Conservation Translocations: Looking to the Future
- Part IV Case Studies
- 14 Reintroduction of the Endemic Plant Manglietiastrum sinicum (Magnoliaceae) to Yunnan Province, China
- 15 Applying Adaptive Management to Reintroductions of Pyne’s Ground-Plum Astragalus bibullatus
- 16 Five Reasons to Consider Long-Term Monitoring: Case Studies from Bird Reintroductions on Tiritiri Matangi Island
- 17 Multiple Reintroductions to Restore Ecological Interactions in a Defaunated Tropical Forest
- 18 Bringing Jaguars and Their Prey Base Back to the Iberá Wetlands, Argentina
- 19 The Return of the Eurasian Beaver to Britain: The Implications of Unplanned Releases and the Human Dimension
- 20 The Role of Community Engagement in Conservation Translocations: The South of Scotland Golden Eagle Project (SSGEP)
- 21 The European Native Oyster and the Challenges for Conservation Translocations: The Scottish Experience
- 22 Slow and Steady Wins the Race: Using Non-native Tortoises to Rewild Islands off Mauritius
- 23 Assisted Colonisation as a Conservation Tool: Tasmanian Devils and Maria Island
- Index
- Plates
Summary
In Argentina, jaguars have been lost from most of their range, but efforts are being made to reintroduce jaguars in the Iberá wetlands, where they went extinct in historical times. Before the reintroduction of jaguars, we strengthened the protection status of the reserve, restored jaguars’ prey base, communicated to a broad audience the goals of the project, and are transforming the local economy from extraction-based to ecotourism-based. In January and April 2021, after ten years of preparation, we released two females with two four-month-old cubs each. An adult male is scheduled to be released in 2021. Communication campaigns, meetings with all stakeholders, including local communities and decision makers, and a strategy to convert the local economy into ecotourism, were key to building strong support for the return of the jaguar. Future actions will include releasing 8–20 individuals within the next three years, monitoring demographic and genetic parameters of the population, maintaining ongoing work with local communities leading to the establishment of a robust ecotourism economy, and close engagement with the public as jaguars disperse into new areas, where predation on livestock might occur.
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- Information
- Conservation Translocations , pp. 443 - 448Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022