Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Mexico’s jaguar population has jumped 33% since 2010

Mexico’s jaguar population is climbing, but the country’s biggest cat isn’t out of the woods yet.

A four-month census conducted last year by the National Alliance for Jaguar Conservation (ANCJ) has concluded there are 5,326 wild jaguars throughout the country — a 33% jump from 2010, when the species was labeled endangered (as it still is).

jaguar staring
The Yucatán Peninsula is the Mexican region with the most jaguars, but they are found in 16 states, from Tamaulipas in the northeast to Chiapas in the southwest. (Wikimedia Commons)

Moreover, the 2024 figure is an 11% jump since the last such census was completed in 2018.

Results from the third national jaguar census were initially supposed to be released a year ago, and were then delayed until February 2025 before being released last week.

Those delays are not altogether surprising, considering the first census in 2008 — studying jaguar populations across 15 conservation sites — took three years to complete. The work put into that study established Mexico as a leader in conservation strategies for preserving wild jaguar populations.

According to that first census, an estimated 4,000 jaguars lived in the country, mostly in the Yucatán peninsula. The second census in 2018 found that the figure had increased to approximately 4,800.

Though the newest jaguar count is about 525 more, advocates warn the species (Panthera onca) is far from secure.

To escape extinction risk, Mexico needs at least 8,000 jaguars, a goal scientists say may take more than 30 years at the current pace.

Currently, the Yucatán Peninsula leads the nation with an estimated 1,699 jaguars. The Pacific South region has 1,541, followed by Northeast/Central Mexico with 813, Pacific North with 733 and Pacific Central with 540.

Rare coral, sea stars and a jaguar: What the contents of a Templo Mayor altar tell us about Mexico’s past

The study was conducted in 23 jaguar habitat sites in 16 states: Sonora, Sinaloa, Nayarit, Jalisco, Michoacán, Guerrero, Chiapas, Quintana Roo, Yucatán, Campeche, Morelos, Hidalgo, San Luis Potosí, Nuevo León and Tamaulipas.

Researchers used 920 motion-detecting cameras over 414,000 hectares, which recorded 134 specimens: 67 females, 47 males, 12 unidentified and eight offspring. Those numbers formed the basis for the total population estimate.

Gerardo Ceballos, president of the ANCJ, an NGO, called the numbers “surprising and encouraging.”

He emphasized that threats limiting recovery remain, citing habitat loss, illegal hunting, animal trafficking, livestock-borne diseases and conflicts with people.

He credited the growing numbers partly to Mexico’s expanding protected areas, which allow the elusive predators more room to roam and breed. However, he added, 70% of the sites where jaguars live in Mexico are outside of protected natural areas.

Conservation groups are urging federal authorities and social media companies to do more to stop the illegal trade in jaguar parts.

“We want to make everyone aware that … jaguar protection is a shared responsibility,” said Humberto Pena, state strategy coordinator at ANCJ.

Ceballos said the reserves with the largest number of jaguars are Calakmul, Gran Calakmul, Balam Kú and Balam Kin (Yucatán Peninsula); Montes Azules (Chiapas); Sierra del Abra Tanchipa (San Luis Potosí); Chamela-Cuixmala (Jalisco); and Sierra de Vallejo-Río Ameca (Nayarit).

Some states, like Hidalgo, barely registered a presence for the big cats; just one sighting was recorded in the central Mexican state.

With reports from Excélsior, Contra Réplica, Reuters and Milenio

2 COMMENTS

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Sheinbaum first report

‘We’re doing well and going to do better’: Sheinbaum delivers upbeat first government report

4
President Claudia Sheinbaum on Monday delivered her first annual government report in a 70-minute speech from the National Palace, exactly 11 months after she took office.

A pothole toppled 2 wheelchair racers mid-marathon. One fought back to claim 3rd place

0
Mexicans Alan Frías and Gonzalo Valdovino finished first and third in the wheelchair division of Mexico City's marathon, but Valdovino said that finishing third after his nasty fall "felt like first place."
cancún airport

The only airport with direct flights to every 2026 World Cup city? It’s Cancún

1
Quintana Roo authorities are hoping that their lead in air connectivity will justify promoting Cancún and the state as a whole as the "Gateway to the 2026 World Cup."
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity