In the U.S. fear based initiatives are rampant. Morality is as rare as the Jaguars. If Jags can't survive, then neither shall we. Thanks for your enlightening brilliance!
I hope these cats and the thick billed parrot will be restored to their former range. Native big cats and parrots can come back if we allow them. All beautiful animals and very charismatic animals should be easy to get public support and as their ecological position is conserved it will help all lesser-known animals/plants in their ranges.
Even in overly populated Switzerland and Central Europe nearly all predators bigger than a fox were killed off. About twenty years ago there were reports of wolves and later on brown bears returning by themselves. I was over excited an happy to hear that. Now wolves got so common that they are even seen in towns in Suburbia, including my neighourhood. It is astonisching that for nearly a hundred years those animals were never seen anymore and suddenly they returned and multiplied very quickly. There were a few problem animals that had to be hunted and killed. A bear that is absolutely not scared by humans is actually a real problem. Still it broke my heart when a bear had to be killed. This beast would have likely killed someone sooner or later. A Jaguar in the wide wilderness of Arizona is not very likely to be a threat to humans. But I bet if one would decide to roam into villages and towns, people would scream in fear. Let us hope that will never be the case. I have seen amazing camera footage of a Jaugar in Brazil who decided to sleep on a path. For over a thousand years Jaguars never had any predator that could kill them except us humans of course, so they can be quite fearless. Jaguars are among the absolutely most fascinating and beautiful creatures in the entire animal kingdom.
I was born in San Antonio.. Bexar is pronounced Bey-her... Whenever I visit there today and there is a reason to say it, I always pronounce it BEX-ARE.. LOL... Great video! Thanks!
I don't know how I feel about one being sighted - I think they have been in Arizona for decades, and I kind of wish they remained invisible. It's not fair that we have trail cameras now, because that makes it all-but-impossible for the jaguars to hide from the most psychotic predator on the planet: human beings.
Bexar Co. resident here! We pronounce it as "bear", however, way back in the day it was Bejar. The story goes that the German settlers had a tough time pronouncing that, so they said basically said 'to hell with the j' and replaced it with the ol silent X. Anyhow, keep churning out the solid content, brother!
Jaguars were originally a North American species as South America was isolated from North America for millions of years. Jaguar's ancestors probably entered the Americas from Eurasia.
For some senseless reason “ Bexar “ is pronounced “ 🐻 “ by the locals. They’re wrong. There’s no reason it should be pronounced that way. I say as it’s pronounced correctly. I can’t understand the reasoning behind it. I live in San Antonio .
@@myblacklab7 Mvskoke language, includes Muscogee Creek and Seminoles, its spelled ue-kaccv in our alphabet. I'm a Biologist too, going to start doing some more digging on this subject...
I wish Mountain Lions could be reintroduced to the east coast to control the abundant deer population. What happened to "Rambo" the previous resident Jaguar in Arizona?
There should be at least two more way points in south Texas. A jaguar was killed in the RGV northeast of Brownsville in 1946. It is a well documented case. And the last confirmed Jaguar in Texas was shot along Santa Gertrudis Creek near Kingsville shortly after in 1948. It should be pronounced Bey-ar county.
This is great news. It's been a while since we've seen much from the colleges/trackers of Jaguars in AZ. Hopefully, we will see the Jaguar repopulate the US, especially AZ. Male Jaguars require a fairly large range, maybe their population is expanding and male Jaguars are being pushed back into the US. The argument of Jaguars being a problem for livestock is not a great argument. We have Mountain Lions throughout AZ and other states and they aren't a major problem for livestock, the Jaguar shouldn't be an issue either. Liked and subbed. 👍
In the U.S. fear based initiatives are rampant. Morality is as rare as the Jaguars. If Jags can't survive, then neither shall we. Thanks for your enlightening brilliance!
I hope these cats and the thick billed parrot will be restored to their former range. Native big cats and parrots can come back if we allow them. All beautiful animals and very charismatic animals should be easy to get public support and as their ecological position is conserved it will help all lesser-known animals/plants in their ranges.
JESUS is such a wonderful CREATOR
You mean God? Yeah, God's Great!
Even in overly populated Switzerland and Central Europe nearly all predators bigger than a fox were killed off. About twenty years ago there were reports of wolves and later on brown bears returning by themselves. I was over excited an happy to hear that. Now wolves got so common that they are even seen in towns in Suburbia, including my neighourhood. It is astonisching that for nearly a hundred years those animals were never seen anymore and suddenly they returned and multiplied very quickly. There were a few problem animals that had to be hunted and killed. A bear that is absolutely not scared by humans is actually a real problem. Still it broke my heart when a bear had to be killed. This beast would have likely killed someone sooner or later.
A Jaguar in the wide wilderness of Arizona is not very likely to be a threat to humans. But I bet if one would decide to roam into villages and towns, people would scream in fear. Let us hope that will never be the case.
I have seen amazing camera footage of a Jaugar in Brazil who decided to sleep on a path. For over a thousand years Jaguars never had any predator that could kill them except us humans of course, so they can be quite fearless. Jaguars are among the absolutely most fascinating and beautiful creatures in the entire animal kingdom.
I have seen a black cat in NW Arkansas and near Pine Bluff, Arkansas.
Bexar is pronounced "bear" as in bear naked. The the county san Antonio is in. Now you know lol
I was born in San Antonio.. Bexar is pronounced Bey-her... Whenever I visit there today and there is a reason to say it, I always pronounce it BEX-ARE.. LOL... Great video! Thanks!
To me it sounds like 🐻. 😂
I don't know how I feel about one being sighted - I think they have been in Arizona for decades, and I kind of wish they remained invisible. It's not fair that we have trail cameras now, because that makes it all-but-impossible for the jaguars to hide from the most psychotic predator on the planet: human beings.
Wait, did fish and wildlife kill El Jefe?! Is that what happened to him?!
From my understanding, El Jefe was believed to return to Mexico. A few conservation groups had confirmed photographs in 2021 on trail cameras
Getting that Jaguar on my trail camera was incredible! I will get him again...
Bexar Co. resident here! We pronounce it as "bear", however, way back in the day it was Bejar. The story goes that the German settlers had a tough time pronouncing that, so they said basically said 'to hell with the j' and replaced it with the ol silent X. Anyhow, keep churning out the solid content, brother!
That’s not a silent x, though. They may have at some point silenced it, but it’s not silent if you’re pronouncing /reading it correctly.
Jaguars were originally a North American species as South America was isolated from North America for millions of years. Jaguar's ancestors probably entered the Americas from Eurasia.
For some senseless reason “ Bexar “ is pronounced “ 🐻 “ by the locals. They’re wrong. There’s no reason it should be pronounced that way. I say as it’s pronounced correctly. I can’t understand the reasoning behind it. I live in San Antonio .
Jaguars historic range should include the southeast. Ethnographic evidence is ubiquitous that they lived there.
In our language we call them 'we-got-dza' meaning water lion or water cougar.
@@dino_rider7758 Cool! What language is that? Seminole?
@@myblacklab7 Mvskoke language, includes Muscogee Creek and Seminoles, its spelled ue-kaccv in our alphabet. I'm a Biologist too, going to start doing some more digging on this subject...
@@dino_rider7758 Thank you.
I hope your research into the subject bears good fruit.
I wish Mountain Lions could be reintroduced to the east coast to control the abundant deer population. What happened to "Rambo" the previous resident Jaguar in Arizona?
There should be at least two more way points in south Texas. A jaguar was killed in the RGV northeast of Brownsville in 1946. It is a well documented case. And the last confirmed Jaguar in Texas was shot along Santa Gertrudis Creek near Kingsville shortly after in 1948.
It should be pronounced Bey-ar county.
I’m from West Texas right next to the Davis Mountains we got some Big Cats I’ve seen out here
Wait till people find out they never left PA... Seen more than one in the 90's
Jaguar pelts were seen in Northern Cailfornia in the early to mid 1800s
I live close to there
He heard the border was open
Rosettes, rather than spots.
I have just watched Jason's footage .
Hope you enjoyed it
It's pronounced like the aspirin Bayer the x is silent
Bay l Err
This is great news. It's been a while since we've seen much from the colleges/trackers of Jaguars in AZ. Hopefully, we will see the Jaguar repopulate the US, especially AZ. Male Jaguars require a fairly large range, maybe their population is expanding and male Jaguars are being pushed back into the US. The argument of Jaguars being a problem for livestock is not a great argument. We have Mountain Lions throughout AZ and other states and they aren't a major problem for livestock, the Jaguar shouldn't be an issue either. Liked and subbed. 👍
Tex-ar-cana
Beautiful leave them alone
Tex-ar-cana
Can they really cross in to the US from Mexico, with that new wall Trump started..
There are hundreds of holes that Pedo Peter and the cartels created.
Lame