When I saw this photo yesterday it took my breath away. This is the first camera trap photo of a jaguar at Karanambu. Of course, we know this gorgeous cat lives here — there is plenty of evidence, including tracks, cow attacks and rare sightings. Diane even has a story about a jaguar on the dining room table from years ago. Diane’s bedroom is right next door. She could hear him, several nights in a row, eating a chicken a night, until they were all gone. Even so, to actually see one is something else! Wow.

A jaguar caught on camera.
The trap was set by Dr. Evi (EE-vee) Paemelaere, the Karanambu Trust’s first resident conservation biologist. I met Evi when I had just arrived though my visit would be brief: 9 days. Evi, on the other hand, will be at Karanambu for the next year. Initially, her work will focus on a survey of jaguar population density funded by Panthera.org under the guidance of its northern South America coordinator, Dr. Esteban Payan.

Evi Paemelaere, Karanambu Trust's first resident conservation biologist
The exciting thing is that Evi’s work promises to reveal all kinds of important information about the wildlife of Karanambu. Even before Evi captured her first image of a jaguar, she set a few traps just as practice, to make sure the batteries, memory cards and focus were all working properly. Her practice run captured both a male and female ocelot, and a savanna fox. (Evi is sending me these photos so I can post them.)
So the jaguar study will also serve as a starting point for the survey of the wildlife of Karanambu. We also hope Evi is the first of many talented scientists to call the Karanambu Trust House their home base.

Karanambu Trust House
As I have written before, we are at a critical point in the future of Karanambu. In order to help the surrounding communities develop the region in a sustainable way, and ensure Karanambu’s 125 square miles continues to be managed sustainably, we must first establish baseline data about species diversity and health. Only then can we begin to properly monitor the impacts of human activity on the wetlands and savannahs. Our strategy is to focus on key indicator species, including giant otters, jaguars, giant anteaters and arapaimaA South American tropical freshwater fish., and possibly other species such as giant river turtles (if there are enough left to survey.) We cannot manage what we don’t understand. The next photo is a roadside hawk, taken near the gappoA part of the bush near the airstrip that becomes a waterway during the rainy season. Term coined by Diane..

A hawk is just one of many species making its home at Karanambu.
Studying the wildlife of Karanambu has always been part of Diane’s vision, but we (the Trustees of the Karanambu Trust) have not had the support system in place to make this a reality until very recently. The key has been the arrival of Andrea and Salvador DeCaires, who joined Karanambu last August as the new managers of the Karanambu Lodge. (Read their blog: The Adventures of Andrea and Salvador.) Salvador is also the project coordinator for the Karanambu Trust. (For more about Karanambu listen to: A Conversation with Lucy.)

(l-r) Diane, Andrea and Salvador
With Andrea and Salvador on-the-ground at Karanambu, we were finally able to put the word out that we were looking for a conservation biologist. We feel fortunate that Evi found out about the position, and that she was willing and able to find her own funding (through Panthera) to get started. We are excited about the future as there is no doubt Evi will help craft a research plan for the future. As I will write in a future post, the Shedd Aquarium team will also soon begin a study of fish and macroinvertebrate health and diversity, as well as water quality. We also have two short-term Peace Corp volunteers starting at Karanambu this week.
But back to the jaguar, ocelots and fox. All three were captured in the same place, just off the road from the airstrip to Karanambu in the strip of bushy woodland known as the “gappo.” This is a low area of bush that floods in the rainy season. It’s less than a mile from the Rupununi River, which is where the main Karanambu Lodge compound is located. In many ways, the gappo separates the open savannah out near the airstrip (shown in the photo above) — which is also where the Karanambu cattle range — from the small bit of savannah that surrounds the Lodge.

Open savannah near the airstrip

Karanambu cattle being kept safe from jaguar.

During the dry season, it takes 15 minutes to drive from the airstrip to the Lodge, through the gappo where it might be a little muddy.

During the wet season, the bush becomes a waterway and the only way to get from the airstrip to the Lodge is to take a boat through the flooded bush, through a series of ponds and out to the main river.
On my second day at Karanambu, we heard the news that someone saw a jaguar at the gappo. We investigated, of course, and found several tracks. The next photo of a jaguar track is certainly not the best example, but I was convinced as there are large oval toe pads and a smudge of a heel pad which is not made by any other creature I know of. The camera trap photo proves my suspicion.

A jaguar footprint

An ocelot footprint
The gappo near Karanambu is also part of what is called the “three mile bush” which runs south and west of the airstrip toward the village of Yupukari. Evi has set her 16 camera traps throughout the bush. She is out and about today collecting the memory cards from several more. It will be exciting to see what she finds.

(5 votes, average: 4.60 out of 5)

How is it that just anybody can write a weblog and get as popular as this? Its not like youve said anything incredibly impressive more like youve painted a fairly picture over an issue that you know nothing about! I dont want to sound mean, here. But do you genuinely think that you can get away with adding some fairly pictures and not seriously say anything?
i like your taste ,What up form israel .. israel say hello