Heart of the jaguar The extraordinary conservation effort to save the Americas' legendary cat

James Campbell, 1961-

Book - 2025

"Once indigenous to North America, the jaguar is one of the wildest creatures left on the planet, a resilient and efficient predator, with a natural habitat that extends throughout Mexico and Central and South America. But today, one million years after it appeared in the New World, the jaguar is struggling to survive. It has disappeared entirely from Uruguay and El Salvador, and is critically endangered across much of its range. Heart of the Jaguar tells the story of the extraordinary undertaking to save the jaguar, as well as the impassioned conservationist who dedicated his life to the species. James Campbell tracks the legacy of Alan Rabinowitz, a complex personality and a formidable scientist whom Time magazine called "the In...diana Jones of wildlife protection." Rabinowitz first studied jaguars in the jungles of Belize and the Brazilian Pantanal in the 1980s, and later led the charge for the Jaguar Corridor Initiative, making it his dying mission to protect the big cat's historic habitat. Campbell journeys across two continents in search of the species' past, present, and future, taking readers from the Bering Land Bridge to pre-Columbian jungle temples and modern-day jaguar preserves. Despite the thriving trade in jaguar parts and the ravages of industrial agriculture and climate change, Campbell finds sources of hope: wildlife biologists, Indigenous organizers, ranchers, and park administrators who carry on Rabinowitz's legacy. Compelling and clear-eyed, Heart of the Jaguar celebrates these protectors, who continue to make enormous personal sacrifices to ensure that jaguars, the most charismatic of all the big cats, always have a home on this planet." --

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Informational works
Documents d'information
Published
New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
James Campbell, 1961- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 318 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780393867619
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Campbell (Braving It, 2016) has previously written books about history and survival in the Arctic. In Heart of the Jaguar, he crafts a narrative about not only the endangered animal of the title but also about one particular biologist who was determined to save it. Alan Rabinowitz, "the Indiana Jones of wildlife ecology" and author of multiple titles on the jaguar, fought for an international wildlife corridor to protect the animal that extends thousands of latitudinal miles. In alternating chapters, Campbell shares the history of jaguars, the largest cat in the Western Hemisphere, and Rabinowitz's often dangerous work to preserve it and its habitat. As he writes in the preface, the two men communicated for years as Campbell developed his own fascination with efforts to protect the animal. Rabinowitz's death in 2018 left a vacuum in the world of wildlife conservation, but Campbell does an outstanding job of honoring his work while echoing his travels and telling the story of the jaguar and the dedicated people, himself included, still determined to protect it.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

On the struggle to protect the Americas' largest cat. As author Campbell notes throughout, the fortunes of the "New World's most dominant apex predator" would be considerably diminished absent the work of the late biologist Alan Rabinowitz. George Schaller, the eminent zoologist and world traveler, sent Rabinowitz to Central America to track the disappearing cat, its habitat being constantly eroded by human development. Rabinowitz returned with the conviction that contiguous corridors, safe ground constituting "a single ecological unit," was needed to give the jaguar room to roam. He also courted controversy when a few individual jaguars were spotted in Arizona and New Mexico, arguing that conservation efforts needed to be concentrated south of the border. Yet, as Campbell observes, the cat, whose ancestors crossed the Bering land bridge from Siberia a million years ago, has a historic range that includes much of the western U.S. as well as Mexico and points south. While the Southwestern deserts may be a future sanctuary for the big cat, jaguars thrive best in more tropical settings, as Campbell reports from prey-rich regions such as the Amazonian rainforest and the Pantanal and Iberá wetlands of South America. In fact, the deserts are now the setting for extensive legal struggles to declare the jaguar a native and endangered species--a designation most ranchers oppose, having already lost the battle against reintroducing the Mexican gray wolf. As Campbell adds, the struggle to preserve jaguar habitat sometimes overlaps with the struggle to preserve Indigenous homelands, as with the Maya people of the Yucatán, their historic territory threatened by tourism and the construction of a high-speed train. At the same time, the Trump border wall is preventing the migration of jaguars north from Mexico, yet another obstacle to the conservation of the species. A good overview of the complexities behind keeping a threatened species alive in a world overrun by humans. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.