A jaguar sighted in Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil. Photographed by Marlon du Toit.
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✨ happy international jaguar day ✨
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A jaguar (Panthera onca) relaxes in Brazil's Pantanal
by Fabrice Stoger
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flickr
Jaguar Krefeld JN6A0274 by safi kok
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Practicing inks. I wanted to see what a jaguar would look like in one of my boxier styles.
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Jaglions (Panthera leo x Panthera onca) [x]
(These were whoops babies, intentionally breeding hybrid cats is unethical)
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Close-up of Jaguar cat coat (Panthera onca)
Photo by Staffan Widstrand
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We watched this female jaguar resting during midday heat (40+ degrees). Suddenly, a massive male jaguar jumped out of the bushes. The female's adrenaline kicked in and her pupils turned blue for a second, as you can see on the shots.
Photographed at Pantanal, Brazil by Burkhard
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Memphis Zoo, Prentiss Place, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
Joshua J. Cotten
Speed: 50 mph (Maximum, Running)
Mass: 120 – 210 lbs (Adult)
Conservation status: Near Threatened (Population decreasing)
Scientific name: Panthera onca
Lifespan: 12 – 15 years (In the wild)
Height: 2.2 – 2.5 ft. (At Shoulder)
Bite force: around 1,500 pounds per square inch
The jaguar is a large cat species and the only living member of the genus Panthera native to the Americas. With a body length of up to 1.85 m and a weight of up to 158 kg, it is the biggest cat species in the Americas and the third largest in the world.
Found from northern Mexico southward to northern Argentina. Its preferred habitats are usually swamps and wooded regions, but jaguars also live in scrublands and deserts.
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A jaguar (Panthera onca) descends into the river in the Pantanal, Brazil
by Fabrice Stoger
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flickr
jaguar l IMG_0595 by safi kok
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