NATURE
MOUNTAINS OF THE JAGUAR

Nestled in the Maya Mountains like a cornucopia cradling the fruit of Gods sweet creations, the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary (CBWS) shelters the exotic and common flora and fauna of Belize; there, the jaguar reigns.
By Alex Asher / Photos by Darrel Jones
"I drove my little Honda further
and further into the basin until I crested a rise at the top of a long
steep hill. Just as I came over the top, a jaguar stepped out from the
forest into my path. He turned his head and looked at me as if I were
just another in a long line of inexplicable intrusions and then continued
on his way, disappearing into the forest on the opposite side."
Thus began
Alan Rabinowitz' love affair with Belize and its jaguars, an enchantment
that led the young naturalist to spend two years studying the largest
feline in the Americas, and which ultimately led to the creation of the
Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary (CBWS) for the protection of the jaguar.
Today the CBWS, located in this small Central American country bordered
by Guatemala and Honduras, has grown beyond its mandate to protect the
jaguar to include the conservation and study of every facet of plant and
animal life in the basin; even deadwood.
The Cockscomb
Basin is an uncommon geological space whose lower part was formed by a
granite surge 200 million years ago: a 36 by 14 kilometer, depression
in the Maya Mountains occupying more than 500 square kilometers. It was
dubbed the Cockscomb for the mountains' resemblance to a rooster's comb.
The zone has two separate basins: the western side contains the Swasey
watershed, and South Stann Creek Basin is in the east. With elevations
ranging from the tallest point in Belize at Victoria's Peak (1,120 meters),
to a low of 50 meters above sea level, the preserve contains an ideal
topographical range for preserving low and high altitude flora and fauna.
Days
spent in the Cockscomb provide a magical atmosphere with a broad range
of color and sound. Narrow dirt access roads walled by thick vegetation
form flight tunnels for birds that dart up and across overhead. The rivers
are also natural pathways, making riverbanks front-row seats for bird
watching. Large groups of different species coexist, often led by a black-faced
grosbeak (Pheucticus melanocephalus), followed by tanagers (Tanagras),
woodcreepers and warbblers. Riverbanks come alive with their vocalizations
as the rays of the morning sun cast shadows in the canopy. At midday,
when the intense tropical heat drives creatures to rest in the cool shadows,
the woods are silent. And at nightfall the jungle re-awakens to a repeat
performance of an avian chorus inspired by the dissipating warmth.
The impetus
for the creation of the worlds largest jaguar preserve was a study undertaken
on behalf of the New York Zoological Society (now the Wildlife Conservation
Society, WCS). It was prompted by a farmer's fear of becoming a meal for
one of the jaguars he kept bumping into in his fields. Concerned that
the normally shy cats had become noticeably numerous, James Hyde, Permanent
Secretary for the Minister of Natural Resources in Belize in the early
1980's, asked the Belize Audubon Society if they could commission a jaguar
study. In 1981 the international division of the New York Zoological Society
contacted the Belize Audubon Society (BAS) and offered to commission the
research, for which Dr. Alan Rabinowitz was eventually engaged by WCS
director George Shaller.
Data from
initial surveys looked good. Thanks to the region's well preserved forests,
the jaguar was thriving throughout Belize. Timber, the original gold in
the country's hills, had been selectively harvested. The primary wood
export from the former British Honduras was mahogany, which lumber companies
culled from the forests, leaving neighboring wood untouched. While other
countries nearby lost jungle habitat to population growth—and its accompanying
demand to clear-cut woodland for more grazing pasture and crop land—Belize
experienced centuries of selective logging that left areas like the Cockscomb
basin full of first growth forests.
Despite
healthy forests and jaguar populations in other areas, Rabinowitz chose
the Cockscomb for its jaguar density, its varied topography and for the
enveloping Maya Mountains that form the basin. Over the course of two
years, Rabinowitz caught jaguars in steel cages baited with pigs (now
on display at the park), studied them and tagged them with radio collars.
Using a positioning system, he kept track of their movements to determine
their range and habits.
Rabinowitz
research showed that unlike their diurnal relatives in Brazil, the Belizean
jaguars hunt at night, but that like their cousins they maintain a very
large range. Male jaguars roam over a 25 to 38-square-kilometer territory,
and females maintain half that range—though neither is exclusive—with
a substantial territorial overlap. This information proved invaluable
in determining how much park preserve needed to be set aside to protect
a given number of jaguars.
Rabinowitz
also concluded that the jaguar is not a threat to humans, and poses little
threat to livestock. Studying jaguar feces he found that their favorite
meal was the abundant armadillo (53%), followed by red brocket deer (Mazama
Rufa), peccary, agouti and opossum. The occasional livestock kill
was almost always done by pre-adult males and enfeebled jaguars in search
of an easy meal. Still, livestock left alone in the forest quickly became
jaguar food, indicating that what they avoided were large, open areas.
Armed
with his studies, Rabinowitz enlisted BAS members and lobbied the Belizean
government to create a jaguar preserve in the Cockscomb Basin. In 1985
the World Wildlife Fund gave its first grant to the CBWS. The initial
result was a moratorium on any hunting in the basin, though timber concessions
were still honored. This partial victory still left the feline's general
habitat vulnerable.
Few ancient
sites on the scale of nearby Caracol—the ancient Maya city that once
conquered part of the Peten region in what is presently northern Guatemala—have
been found in the sanctuary. It is likely that heavy forestation covers
many lost cities and temples. The few Maya digs, like the Pierce Ruins
site, are added attractions for tourists to the Cockscomb.
Some
very contemporary Maya villages like Quam Bay, now site of a CBWS visitors
center, had to be relocated when the park was created. At first some of
the transferred people were concerned about giving up their traditional
milpa (corn) farming, and dubious about the ability of the new
park to provide them with an income. Eventually they were won over by
BAS policies like hiring only local Maya to work as trail guides and park
managers. In 1985 all of the villages were consolidated into the Maya
Center, Since then government has built a community center, a school,
a soccer field, streets, a clinic, a water system, electricity and telephones.
Still, it
was difficult to explain the abstract concept of conservation to the people
who would have to move their homes to accomplish it. Ernesto Saqui, CBWS
park director and himself a member of a Cockscomb Basin village, wrote
about the gradual way in which he won the locals over.
"The people
felt that one man came and took away everything. The transition took three
years. How did it happen? First, a local person has to be in charge. No
matter how much a foreigner is liked, they will always be foreign. I understand
the way the villagers think. I am one of them. The fear they feel, I feel.
Their concerns are my concerns, too.
"The
second ingredient is the community approach. I brought all the Village
Council leaders—the ones who ask the question—up to the Sanctuary, along
with the officials from the Forest Department and the BAS. The meeting
did not really change any minds, but it started them thinking. Gradually,
Maya Center villagers began to see the advantages of the sanctuary for
them."
Enlisting
international support for the preserve proved to be much easier. The United
States Peace Corps joined the effort right away, sending volunteer Daniel
Taylor, a specialist in wildlife management. Taylor worked to turn the
Basin into a park, building a bunkhouse, cooking and bathroom facilities,
and he cut hiking trails in the woods. By 1987 Ernest Saqui, the park's
first (and present) director was hired, and the CBWS was prepared to be
open to the public.
At
first the land included was barely enough to conserve the territory of
one jaguar. The BAS and other agencies continued lobbying to expand the
sanctuary, until four and a half years after its creation, in November,
1990, most of the basin was designated a jaguar sanctuary. The grant increased
protected land 25 fold, providing greater opportunities for extensive
wildlife study and conservation projects.
In 1991
the BAS invited the Wildlife Conservation Society to study the possible
reintroduction of howler monkeys, locally knows as "baboons," to the basin.
Although it seems like a simple catch and release task, the reality of
species transplantation is quite complex. Details of their diet must be
known, they have to be matched to a similar habitation in the forest canopy,
unfamiliar predators have to be taken into account, and so does their
range and the size and makeup of their group.
The Black
Howler Monkey had once been so numerous in the Cockscomb that its tremendous
dusk and dawn calls were heard throughout the basin. Listed as "threatened"
by many nations, the Cockscomb howler monkey population was destroyed
by yellow fever in the 1950's and habitat devastation wrought by Hurricane
Hattie in 1961.
Between
May of 1992 and May of 1994, the CBWS oversaw a massive re-introduction
of this vociferous primate. Tranquilizing monkeys with a dart gun and
catching them in nets, the team took blood samples, weighed them and fitted
them with radio transceivers. All but one control group, which was re-released
as a control group, were placed in acclimation cages for one to three
days before being released. A total of 62 animals were moved from 1992
to 1994, and a population count undertaken in 1995 showed their population
to be as high as 75 primates, with many groups sporting healthy babies
and juveniles. Today the howlers' roar once again joins that of the jaguar
in the Cockscomb's cacophony.
The
quick success of the Cockscomb has inspired the Belizean government to
expand the park's range when possible. The most recent growth of the CBWS
was in 1995, when another 16,000 hectares of the former Bladen Branch
Nature Preserve was added. Presently the sanctuary is a contiguous protected
area of almost 100,000 acres, which includes the entirety of the Cockscomb
Basin.
Today the
CBWS has become more than a jaguar sanctuary. To protect the jaguar it
is necessary to protect the armadillo, peccary and other species it eats,
and to protect the armadillo and peccary it is necessary to protect the
plant-life they consume; many of which may have medicinal value that has
yet to be studied. In an era when conservationists often fight environmental
battles, frequently as outsiders, whose interests clash with the very
real needs of natives who depend on the forest for daily survival, the
success of a park like the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary is a cause
for celebration.
Writing
in the "Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary," Rabinowitz marveled at the
sanctuary's rapid success: "When I initiated efforts to protect the Cockscomb
Basin, it was nor for jaguars alone that I labored. The truth is that
I never expected such a change in thinking to occur as quickly as it has.
My admiration goes out to the local Maya communities around the Cockscomb
Basin Wildlife Sanctuary and to the Belizean people as a whole for their
foresight and commitment."
Special thanks to authors of the "The Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary," edited by Emmons, et al.
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