Habitat
Mostly deciduous and tropical
rain forest, but jaguars can range from montane areas to the wet
savanna. Jaguars are often found near fresh water where they hunt
fish. |
Head/Body
Length and Shoulder Height
Adult length (including tail): 5-8.5 feet (1.6-2.6 m)
Adult height: 27-30 inches (68-76 cm);
females are smaller |
Weight
Adult weight: 79-348 pounds (36-158 kg);
females weigh less |
Life
Span
In the wild, about 11 years; up to 22
years in zoos |
Diet
In the wild: Deer, peccaries, monkeys, tapirs,
birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, small rodents and domestic
stock if readily available. Jaguars can survive on anything from
herd animals to insects.
At the zoo: Horse
meat, mutton, chicken, rabbit, beef knuckle bones and commercially
prepared feline diet, ground meat and vitamins. |
If you
like this animal and find it particularly fascinating you
can adopt it!
Reproduction
Female jaguars sexually mature at about 2 years of age; males at 3
to 4 years. Mating in the wild or in captivity may occur at any
time; the female is receptive for about 6-17 days. Gestation lasts
about 93-110 days. Female jaguars usually give birth to one to
four cubs, averaging two young per litter. She gives birth in a
den surrounded by a dense thorn thicket, or under tree roots.
Life Cycle
Jaguar cubs are usually born with their eyes closed, weigh about 25-29 ounces
(700-900 gr), and are highly dependent upon their mother for survival.
After about two weeks, a cub's eyes open. Soon thereafter, jaguar
young may leave the den, only to explore and play not far from their mother.
Cubs continue to suckle until they are 5 to 6 months old. Cubs start to
follow their mother on hunts when they are about 6 months old, but will
not hunt alone until they are one to 2 years of age. By that time, they
are ready to leave their mother's side to look for their own territory
and mate.
On Their
Own
Jaguars, like most species of cats, are solitary animals
who occupy large areas of land. Large territories are more likely to contain
sufficient numbers of prey species to sustain them. They mark their territory
with urine, scent markings, and by scratching nearby trees. In areas of high
prey density, jaguars may share limited parts of their home range with other
jaguars. Mothers with young, subadult siblings, and courting or mating individuals
are the few occasions that jaguars spend time together.
When a female is ready to mate, she will stray
from her own territory to find a mate. In order to locate a mate,
males make a mewing cry. While a female is searching for a mate,
she may sometimes be accompanied briefly by several males.
Silent Solitary Stalkers
Jaguars are nocturnal hunters, and do most of their
stalking on the ground. They are also excellent climbers, leaping from a tree
or a ledge to ambush their prey. Jaguars have a compact body, with a large
broad head and powerful jaws. With large prey, jaguars commonly bite the head
and puncture the skull with their canine teeth. Jaguars dispatch smaller prey
by simply breaking their necks. Large carcasses are either buried or hidden
in a sheltered area, for the jaguar will return to eat when it is hungry again.
The jaguar is also a patient hunter of fish. It waits by the water’s
edge, occasionally hitting the surface of the water with its tail, which inadvertently
attracts fish. As the fish approach the shore, the jaguar swats at them, spearing
the fish with its sharp claws.
|
Fascinating
Facts
- Jaguars are one of the few species
of wild cats that have melanistic (black) individuals!
- Jaguar
is from the American Indian word meaning "killer that takes
its prey in a single bound!"
- Like most big cats, jaguars enjoy
water. Jaguars are strong swimmers, and will follow their
prey into the water during the chase!
|

Woodland Park Zoo's jaguar is located in the
new Jaguar Cove exhibit at the entrace to our Tropical Rain Forest
zone. The exhibit contains the upper fallen portion of a kapok tree,
a limestone cave, a flowing stream, a pool with live fish, sandy
shoreline, a waterfall, abundant plants and naturalistic shelters.
Outside the exhibit is a research tent to provide education programs
and informal learning.

Jaguars are
an endangered species. Estimates indicate that over 10,000 still
exist in the wild. However, their numbers are decreasing rapidly
as a result of habitat destruction and the commercial fur trade.
In many areas, they are near extinction. Although large resident
populations still exist in the Amazon rain forests, the key to the
jaguar's continued survival is its
ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions.
The zoo participates
in the Association of Zoos & Aquariums' (AZA) Species
Survival Plan (SSP) for jaguars. The primary focus of the jaguar
SSP, which manages the captive population in North America, is education
and conservation of the species in its countries of origin. For more
information on the Jaguar SSP, visit its Web site at www.jaguarssp.org.
How You Can Help!
You can help preserve and protect wildlife and their habitat.
Join and become active in Woodland Park Zoo and other conservation
organizations of your choice. Please do not buy products made from
wild animal parts. Contact your elected representatives and express
your views about conservation of endangered species and wild habitats.
Contact Woodland Park Zoo at webkeeper@zoo.org to find out about ways you can support conservation
programs at the zoo. Discover more about endangered cats by calling
the International Society for Endangered Cats, Inc. at 1-800-465-6384
or (403) 279-5892 or at their Web site. Learn other
ways you can help conserve wildlife and the habitats they require
for survival by visiting our How You Can Help page.
Sources and Suggested Reading
Alderton, David. 1993. Wild Cats of the World. Facts On File, Inc.,
New York, NY. 192 p. Sleeper, Barbara. 1995. Wild Cats of the World.
Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, NY. 216 p.
For Kids!
Resnick, Jane. 1994. Cats. Kidsbooks, Inc.,
Chicago, IL. 29 p.
Zoobooks. 1992. Big Cats. Wildlife
Education, Ltd., San Diego, CA. 16 p.
*Taxonomic classification varies between references.
Classification information used in this fact sheet was taken from Mammal
Species of the World: A Taxonomic And Geographic Reference, edited
by Don E. Wilson and DeeAnn M. Reeder, Second Edition, 1993.
More
References |