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‘Rare species’ not seen in Arizona area for 50 years spotted on wildlife camera

By Daniella Segura, The Charlotte Observer
Published: August 16, 2024, 6:04am

To ensure her trail cameras would stay operational during the hot Arizona summer, researcher Kinley Ragan trekked to 23 of them.

At each, Ragan, a field research project manager with the Phoenix Zoo, checked the camera’s batteries and SD card, as well as ensured the camera was angled at an optimal position, Ragan told McClatchy News in an Aug. 12 phone interview.

She was flipping through the last of 100 videos on one of the camera’s SD cards during her July trip to the Atascosa Highlands area when something caught her eye.

“At the very, very end, I saw (an) ocelot,” Ragan said.

The June 12 footage shows an ocelot walk across the screen before stopping and standing on a rock.

“ I was in disbelief at first, watching the video over and over again,” Ragan said in an Aug. 12 zoo news release, “but soon a big smile spread across my face as the full impact of this discovery for the important region set in.”

This was the first time an ocelot has been seen “in the Atascosa Highlands region in at least 50 years,” the zoo said.

“It’s super-exciting news,” Ragan said, adding that the sighting leaves her “hopeful.”

Wildlife study

The zoo set up 50 cameras across the area in April as part of the Atascosa Complex Wildlife Study, Ragan said.

The area, “which includes the Atascosa, Tumacácori, and Pajarito mountains,” is understudied, the zoo said.

“We’re looking to better understand medium and large mammals and how they’re moving and existing within this important wildlife corridor,” Ragan said.

While the team was hopeful one of the cameras, which will remain in place until October 2025, would pick up an ocelot, they were unsure.

“There hadn’t been research done there in 10 years and there hadn’t been a record in 50 years,” Ragan said. “So we weren’t sure, but we were really happy when we did get this record.”

About ocelots

Across their entire range, from South America to the United States, the ocelot population is decreasing, but they are listed as “ east concern” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, according to Ragan.

“However, in Arizona, they are critically endangered, and they’re also endangered in Mexico,” Ragan said.

Some threats to the species’ survival “include habitat fragmentation and loss,” according to the zoo.

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