The Wildcat Photo-Survey Contest promotes conservation in several ways, including (1) providing indirect compensation for livestock losses, (2) building relationships and trust with ranchers and vaqueros in the vicinity of the Northern Jaguar Reserve, (3) providing a financial incentive to keep cats alive, (4) providing access to private ranches to gather information to help guide future research and conservation projects, and (5) providing a positive, high-profile awareness of the northern jaguar. The Wildcat Photo-Survey Contest is already helping to build relationships and improve local perspectives on jaguars, and wildlife conservation in general.
In addition to photos of pumas, ocelots and bobcats, the Contest has also yielded dozens of pictures of other wildlife species, including deer, javelina, coati, squirrels, lagomorphs, skunks, coyotes and foxes, supporting the idea that prey base in this region can sustain modest numbers of jaguars.
The Photo-Survey Contest is in its earliest stages, but we are pleased with progress so far – particularly with the number of hectares that are enrolled because this represents areas in which jaguars are much safer from poaching than they had been before the Contest. The public enthusiasm for the Contest, and the growing public support for jaguars is particularly promising. Late each year, the Project will oversee a local Jaguar Festival, during which additional prizes for camera contest photos – most skunks or funniest photo, for example – will be awarded and participating ranchers will be recognized as conservation heroes. Ancillary prizes will be given to the local schools.
As we hoped and predicted, a self-policing atmosphere is beginning to develop and the Project is receiving reports from ranchers participating in the Wildcat Photo-Survey Contest about other ranchers who are killing jaguars. Whether these reports are motivated by a conservation ethic or financial self-interest is irrelevant — it is becoming unacceptable to kill jaguars in the region.