{"id":1993,"date":"2010-05-12T20:00:00","date_gmt":"2010-05-12T20:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.pasopacifico.org\/2010\/05\/jaguar-corridors-in-the-new-york-times\/"},"modified":"2024-06-24T13:41:59","modified_gmt":"2024-06-24T19:41:59","slug":"jaguar-corridors-in-the-new-york-times","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pasopacifico.org\/jaguar-corridors-in-the-new-york-times\/","title":{"rendered":"Jaguar Corridors in the New York Times"},"content":{"rendered":"
In today’s New York Times<\/i><\/a>:<\/p>\n To Help Jaguars Survive, Ease Their Commute A few years ago, he acknowledged, his first reaction might have been to reach for a gun. But his farm now sits in the middle of land that Costa Rica has designated a \u201cjaguar corridor\u201d \u2014 a protected pathway that allows the stealthy, nocturnal animals to safely traverse areas of human civilization.<\/p>\n In the past few years, such\u00a0corridors<\/a>\u00a0have been created in Africa, Asia and the Americas to help animals cope with 21st-century threats, from encroaching highways and malls to\u00a0climate change<\/a>.<\/p>\n These pathways represent an important shift in conservation strategy. Like many other nations, Costa Rica has traditionally tried to protect large mammal species like jaguars by creating sanctuaries \u2014 buying up land and giving threatened animals a home where they can safely eat, fight and breed to eternity.<\/p>\n But in the past decade or so, scientists have realized that connecting corridors are needed because many species rely for survival on the migration of a few animals from one region to another, to intermix gene pools and to repopulate areas devastated by natural disasters or disease. Placing animals in isolated preserves, studies have found, decreases diversity and risks dulling down a species \u2014 like preventing New Yorkers and Californians from getting together to procreate.<\/p>\n \u201cIt was kind of an epiphany,\u201d said Alan Rabinowitz, a zoologist who is president of Panthera, an organization that studies and promotes conservation of large cats. \u201cWe were giving them nice land to live on when what they were doing \u2014 and what they needed \u2014 was an underground railway.\u201d<\/p>\n He said critical migration routes were especially vulnerable in rapidly developing countries, where new roads, shopping malls, dams, playgrounds and subdivisions could spring up overnight, blocking the animals\u2019 passage.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
\nLAS LOMAS, Costa Rica \u2014 H\u00e9ctor Porras-Valverdo tried to adopt a Zen attitude when he discovered recently that jaguars had turned two of his cows into carcasses.
\n…
\n\u201cI understand cats do this because they need to survive,\u201d said Mr. Porras-Valverdo, 41, a burly dairy farmer.<\/p>\n