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Guyana, US organisation sign deal to protect jaguars

 

Written by Demerara Waves, Thursday, 24 January 2013 16:58, Source

 

A jaguar in Guyana's Zoo. (GINA photo)

 

Guyana and the United States (US)-headquartered Panthera Corporation, the world’s leading wild cat conservation group, on Thursday agreed to conserve the country’s national animal, the Jaguar.


A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed by representatives of Panthera and the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment (MoNRE) now paves the way for Guyana’s participation in the International Jaguar Corridor Initiative.


“With the signing of the MOU, Guyana will now be in a better position to benefit from this regional project,” said MoNRE in a statement.


The Initiative is regarded as an ambitious plan to conserve jaguars and work with both protected and non-protected areas to ensure that people and wildlife can co-exist.

 

The newly-created Protected Areas Commission (PAC) will be responsible for the development of sub-agreements and project documents for on-the-ground implementation.


“Much of the initial work under the MOU will focus on research, education, and identifying opportunities for Jaguar conservation and related tourism initiatives,” the ministry added.


Panthera’s regional efforst include facilitating genetic flow between important Jaguar habitats. The MOU provides a framework for research and surveys on the Jaguar, public education on the behaviours of these large cats, and the examination of economic opportunities associated with Jaguar conservation.

 

Under the MOU, Panthera will be providing technical and scientific expertise on conservation priorities, Jaguar movement models and other resources aimed at facilitating long term benefits to local stakeholders, and Guyana as a whole.


The MOU will also provide a solid foundation for new initiatives to understand and mitigate conflicts between humans and Jaguars. These initiatives may include grants for local researchers and research institutions and the development of a conflict response mechanism to deal with problem animals.

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Jaguars will by protected by Guyana with help from conservation groups

 

The pact to save the jaguar was made by Guyana in collaboration with the animal conservation group Panther

 

The government in Guyana has vowed to protect jaguars with help from US conservation groups.

 

The pact to save the largest predator in the Americas was made by Guyana in collaboration with the animal conservation group Panthera.

 

The group has fought to create a corridor for the spotted cat that connects populations from Argentina to Mexico, said the Associated Press.

 

Guyana is one of several countries that has already agreed to join the network, including Colombia and several Central American nations.

 

The jaguar is considered a near-threatened species as its habitat has been disappearing due to urbanization and encroaching farmland.

 

Guyana is said to have some of the most unspoilt forest in South America.

A network of cameras and motion sensors in the forest have shown that it has a healthy number of jaguars - about four per 161 square miles (100 kilometers), reported the Associated Press.

 

"Historically, Guyana has achieved incredible success in sustainably balancing the country's economic development, natural resource management, the livelihoods of its people, and the preservation of its unique wildlife and wild places," Panthera's CEO Alan Rabinowitz said in a statement.

 

"The signing of this jaguar conservation agreement demonstrates the government's continued commitment to its legacy of conservation alongside economic progress and diversification."

 

Jaguars are the third largest feline species after the tiger and lion.

 

It is the national animal of Guyana.

FM

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