In Bolivia’s Madidi National Park:
Researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) set up the camera traps to try and identify jaguars based on the unique patterns of their spots. Once the images were collected, the team ran them through software originally designed to recognize tigers by their stripes.
The 19 jaguars found by the project represent a record number for a single camera-trap survey in the country.
Read more about it at National Geographic Daily News.