#pumas — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #pumas, aggregated by home.social.
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Pachuca vence a Pumas y toma ventaja semifinalista
El vencedor de esta llave obtendrá el pase a la gran final del torneo Clausura 2026 de la Liga Mx. El resultado de ida colocó al Pachuca con ventaja mínima y reforza la importancia del partido de vuelta.
Por Eric Gómez | ReporteroEl club Pachuca venció 1-0 a los Pumas en el estadio Hidalgo durante el partido de ida de las semifinales del torneo Clausura 2026 de la Liga Mx. El conjunto dirigido por Esteban Solari logró contener al cuadro universitario y tomó ventaja en la serie. El resultado dejó a los Tuzos a un paso de disputar la final del futbol mexicano.
El único tanto del encuentro cayó en el primer tiempo tras una jugada individual de Oussama Idrissi. El atacante marroquí realizó un disparo que sufrió un ligero desvío antes de ingresar al arco defendido por Keylor Navas. El guardameta costarricense había evitado previamente varias oportunidades claras del equipo local.
https://twitter.com/LigaBBVAMX/status/2055126158002225200?s=20
Los Tuzos llegaron al compromiso después de eliminar al bicampeón vigente del futbol mexicano en la fase anterior. Por su parte, el equipo comandado por Efraín Juárez arribó tras superar una intensa eliminatoria frente al América. Ambos clubes afrontaron el encuentro con esquemas defensivos sólidos y precauciones tácticas desde los primeros minutos.
Figura bajo palos
Durante gran parte del encuentro, Keylor Navas sostuvo a los universitarios con múltiples atajadas dentro del área. El guardameta costarricense intervino ante disparos de media distancia y remates dentro del área chica. Su actuación evitó una diferencia más amplia en el marcador para el conjunto hidalguense.
El equipo universitario intentó responder con aproximaciones de Adalberto Carrasquilla y algunos ataques por las bandas. Sin embargo, la zaga del Pachuca mantuvo el orden y neutralizó las opciones ofensivas de los visitantes. La presión ejercida por los locales dificultó la generación de jugadas claras para los auriazules. –sn–
Club Pachuca | Cuartoscuro¡Conéctate con Sociedad Noticias! Suscríbete a nuestro canal de YouTube y activa las notificaciones, o bien, síguenos en las redes sociales: Facebook, Twitter e Instagram.
También, te invitamos a que te sumes a nuestro canal de información en tiempo real a través de Telegram.
#NoticiasMX #PeriodismoParaTi #PeriodismoParaTiSociedadNoticias #América #Cdmx #CiudadUniversitaria #Clausura2026 #deportesMéxico #EduardoBauermann #EfraínJuárez #EstebanSolari #FutbolMexicano #futbolNacional #golDeIdrissi #Información #InformaciónMéxico #KeylorNavas #LigaMX #México #Morena #noticia #noticias #NoticiasMéxico #NoticiasSociedad #OussamaIdrissi #Pachuca #partidoPachucaPumas #Pumas #SeciedadNoticiasCom #semifinalClausura2026 #semifinalesLigaMX #SN #Sociedad #SociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom #sociedadNoticias #SociedadNoticiasCom #Tuzos -
SEMIS DE IDA EN LA LIGA MX🇲🇽
Se juegan las Semifinales de Vuelta en la #LigaMX⚽️
📌 #CruzAzul 🚂 vs. #Chivas 🐐
📌 #Pachuca 🌬️ vs. #Pumas 🐾Entra al juego con los momios que @[email protected] trae para ti y apuesta en http://Caliente.mx 🔥
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SEMIS DE IDA EN LA LIGA MX🇲🇽
Se juegan las Semifinales de Vuelta en la #LigaMX⚽️
📌 #CruzAzul 🚂 vs. #Chivas 🐐
📌 #Pachuca 🌬️ vs. #Pumas 🐾Entra al juego con los momios que @[email protected] trae para ti y apuesta en http://Caliente.mx 🔥
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🎥 #Video | ¡De la #LigaMX a la #Champions! ⚽🏀 @Abuelo_NFL y @alexmelon analizan la polémica del América vs Pumas, lo mejor de la NBA y las semis europeas. ¡No te pierdas este resumen deportivo de alto nivel! #Deportes #ClubAmerica #Pumas #NBA
https://zurl.co/6U6bh -
🎥 #Video | ¡De la #LigaMX a la #Champions! ⚽🏀 @Abuelo_NFL y @alexmelon analizan la polémica del América vs Pumas, lo mejor de la NBA y las semis europeas. ¡No te pierdas este resumen deportivo de alto nivel! #Deportes #ClubAmerica #Pumas #NBA
https://zurl.co/6U6bh -
🎥 #Video | ¡De la #LigaMX a la #Champions! ⚽🏀 @Abuelo_NFL y @alexmelon analizan la polémica del América vs Pumas, lo mejor de la NBA y las semis europeas. ¡No te pierdas este resumen deportivo de alto nivel! #Deportes #ClubAmerica #Pumas #NBA
https://zurl.co/6U6bh -
🎥 #Video | ¡De la #LigaMX a la #Champions! ⚽🏀 @Abuelo_NFL y @alexmelon analizan la polémica del América vs Pumas, lo mejor de la NBA y las semis europeas. ¡No te pierdas este resumen deportivo de alto nivel! #Deportes #ClubAmerica #Pumas #NBA
https://zurl.co/6U6bh -
Peru: Quechua Women Lead Efforts to Protect Pumas
⛰️ In Peru’s Andean highlands, Quechua women once killed pumas in retaliation for livestock losses.
🌳 Now, through a women-led conservation group, practical measures such as improved corrals, nonlethal deterrents and forest protection have sharply reduced conflict and ended retaliatory wildcat killings.
🦙 An alpaca wool textile cooperative links conservation with women’s economic empowerment, strengthening both livelihoods and wildlife protection.
#WildlifeWednesday #WildlifeConservation #Peru #Quechua #Pumas #Environment #Biodiversity
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#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect.bsky.social https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=Palm+Oil+Detectives&utm_campaign=publer
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Time for #women #shepherd #Quechua brigade protecting #pampas #cat 🐈, #pumas and #Andean cat 😺 https://news.mongabay.com/2026/02/in-perus-andes-quechua-women-turn-human-wildcat-conflict-into-coexistence/ #wildlife #conservation #AnimalRights #cats #felines
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"¡Se rompió el respeto! 😱 Tras la goleada, el portero de San Diego soltó una frase que tiene a toda la afición de Pumas echando fuego. 🔥 No vas a creer el desplante que le hizo al equipo universitario. 🧤❌
#Pumas #UNAM #Concachampions #ChampionsCup #SanDiego #Polémica #FutbolMexicano"
https://www.tvazteca.com/aztecadeportes/enojados-portero-san-diego-sisniega-dijo-pumas-unam/
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Jaguars and Pumas Eat More Monkeys in Damaged Forests
Study finds that in fragmented forests of #Mexico, #bigcats like #jaguars and pumas find it difficult to find traditional prey animals like #ungulates. Instead they focus on harder to catch prey like tree-dwelling #monkeys, forced out of the trees by #palmoil, #soy and #meat #deforestation. This spells bad news for many #primate species of Central and South America and highlights why urgent forest protection is needed. Help species survive and be #Vegan #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife to protect forests and forest animals.
In #Mexico, big #cats like #jaguars 🐆 and #pumas can’t find ungulate prey due to #palmoil #mining #meat #deforestation. They’ve switched to a diet of #monkeys, putting them in peril. Help them, be #vegan #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterWritten by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Monkeys aren’t normally that popular with Jaguars and Puma but wide-spread logging robs primates of hiding places, drastically reducing their numbers.
Monkeys are not usually a popular menu item for big cats. Primates are, after all, hard to catch: living in the canopies of large trees and rarely coming down to the ground. Jaguar and puma have varied diets and will normally hunt the species that are most common where they live, such as deer, peccary (a type of wild pig) and armadillo.
But jaguar and puma living in southern Mexican forests with a high human footprint (where wood and other resources are regularly harvested and there are large clearings for farms or expanding settlements) seem to be changing their feeding preferences to include more monkeys, according to new research.
Other studies have already found that when there is less of their usual prey around, big cats turn to alternatives. The changes in jaguar and puma diets that my colleagues and I recorded may indicate that the populations of these normal prey are shrinking, or that something in the environment has changed to make catching and eating primates easier.
A jaguar in the jungle of southern Mexico. Mardoz/ShutterstockThis change in the diet of large cats could make the disappearance of primate populations in tropical forests like this one in southern Mexico more likely. This would, in turn, make the disappearance of large cats themselves more likely due to a lack of food, threatening the stability of an entire ecosystem.
On the trail of big cats
When forests are cut down or altered by loggers and hunters, primates are particularly affected, as many species depend on tall trees for food, shelter and to chart paths through the forest. Globally, more than 60% of primate species are threatened with extinction.
These changes to forests have also put large predators at risk. Understanding what is happening in these areas can inform more effective conservation measures, which may prevent species from disappearing.
The Uxpanapa valley in southeastern Mexico is one of the last relicts of tall evergreen forest in the country, and is classified as one of the most biodiverse areas in both Mexico and the world. It is home to jaguar, puma and many other species, including two endangered primates: howler and spider monkeys.
Howler monkeys are native to South and Central American forests. David Havel/ShutterstockI led a research team that studied the distribution of primates in the Uxpanapa Valley for the first time. We recorded the number of primates and where they were found, as well as the type of forest they preferred.
Another team looked for large cats with the help of a dog which could detect their faeces, otherwise known as scat. Scat was collected to obtain DNA and determine the species that left it, whether it had any parasites, and what its diet was like. The team found out what prey these large cats were eating by using microscopes to study the hairs left in each scat. Special identification guides can link each kind of animal to its hair – each has a particular colour, pattern and shape.
Large carnivores maintain biodiversity and the functioning of an ecosystem by controlling populations of certain species – for example, herbivores that might otherwise harm trees or prevent forests regrowing. The presence of such predators can indicate an ecosystem’s health. Knowing what top predators are eating can tell us even more about how an ecosystem is functioning.
Jaguar Panthera onca by Ecuadorian artist Juanchi Pérez portraitWhat we found
When we combined the data and information we collected, we began to understand that something out of the ordinary was happening.
Primates were the most frequent prey found in jaguar and puma scats, making up nearly 35% of the remains. Primate remains were also more likely to be found in scats collected from areas with less forest. Spider monkey remains, for example, were more likely to be found in scats collected in areas with more villages, and in forest that was regrowing after being disturbed.
A possible explanation is that where there are more villages, it is likely that there is more hunting and tree-cutting taking place. Where there is more hunting, the prey that jaguar and puma usually prefer might not be as plentiful. And regrowing forests do not offer primates the same protection as tall, untouched forests. These two factors may explain why large cats are eating spider monkeys more often here.
Jaguar and puma will usually eat the prey that is more abundant. If their preferred prey is scarce, they will hunt the species they encounter most. Similar to what we observed with spider monkeys, in areas where there was less tall forest, howler monkey remains were more likely than non-primate prey to be found in the scats, possibly as big cats found it easier to reach primates.
Logging robs monkeys of hiding places from predators. Eduardo Cota/ShutterstockLess tree cover and overhunting of other prey (combined with general habitat loss) could explain the high rates of primate predation we discovered. Nevertheless, we need to continue monitoring these sites to fully understand these changes in large cat diets.
Our results highlight the importance of maintaining tall forest cover to ensure primates and other forest-dependent species can survive. They also raise the urgent need for conservation, before the negative effects of human activities on both primate and large cat populations become irreversible, and the ecosystems they live in are lost.
Written by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
ENDS
Jaguars, currently deemed Near Threatened, face a substantial habitat reduction of up to 25% in just over two decades. This decline stems from rampant deforestation for palm oil, soy, and meat, as well…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Howler Monkey Alouatta guariba
You will hear a Brown Howler #Monkey before you sere one. Heard from several kilometres away these monkeys have a haunting howl that penetrates and rustles the forest canopy. They live in groups…
by Palm Oil DetectivesColombian Red Howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Red howlers are the largest of the howler monkey species. They have dense and vividly coloured fur that ranges from brown to dark red, with gold or bright orange undersides – the colour…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Spider Monkey Ateles hybridus
The enigmatic blue-billed curassow (Crax alberti – local name “Paujil”), endemic to the tropical humid forests of northern Colombia, is the cracid species most threatened with extinction in the wild from #deforestation
by Palm Oil DetectivesYucatán Black Howler Monkey Alouatta pigra
Their range is being rapidly destroyed for palm oil and sugar cane deforestation and mining. They are also facing human persecution and hunting pressures. Yucatán Black Howler Monkeys have been classified as endangered…
by Palm Oil DetectivesLearn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
Global South America S.E. Asia India Africa West Papua & PNGMountain Tapir Tapirus pinchaque
Frill-Necked Lizard Chlamydosaurus kingii
Grey Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum
Ecuadorean Viscacha Lagidium ahuacaense
Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
Read more about RSPO greenwashing
Lying Fake labels Indigenous Land-grabbing Human rights abuses Deforestation Human health hazardsA 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Read moreTake Action in Five Ways
1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.
Enter your email address
Sign Up
Join 3,174 other subscribers2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.
Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings
Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao
Health Physician Dr Evan Allen
The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert
How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy
3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.
https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20
https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20
https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20
4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.
5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here
Pledge your support#animalBehaviour #AnimalBiodiversityNews #animalCommunication #animalCruelty #animalExtinction #animalIntelligence #animalRights #bigcats #biodiversity #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #cats #deforestation #howler #Jaguars #meat #Mexico #mining #monkeys #PalmOil #palmOilDeforestation #palmoil #Primate #primates #pumas #soy #ungulates #vegan
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Jaguars and Pumas Eat More Monkeys in Damaged Forests
Study finds that in fragmented forests of #Mexico, #bigcats like #jaguars and pumas find it difficult to find traditional prey animals like #ungulates. Instead they focus on harder to catch prey like tree-dwelling #monkeys, forced out of the trees by #palmoil, #soy and #meat #deforestation. This spells bad news for many #primate species of Central and South America and highlights why urgent forest protection is needed. Help species survive and be #Vegan #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife to protect forests and forest animals.
In #Mexico, big #cats like #jaguars 🐆 and #pumas can’t find ungulate prey due to #palmoil #mining #meat #deforestation. They’ve switched to a diet of #monkeys, putting them in peril. Help them, be #vegan #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterWritten by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Monkeys aren’t normally that popular with Jaguars and Puma but wide-spread logging robs primates of hiding places, drastically reducing their numbers.
Monkeys are not usually a popular menu item for big cats. Primates are, after all, hard to catch: living in the canopies of large trees and rarely coming down to the ground. Jaguar and puma have varied diets and will normally hunt the species that are most common where they live, such as deer, peccary (a type of wild pig) and armadillo.
But jaguar and puma living in southern Mexican forests with a high human footprint (where wood and other resources are regularly harvested and there are large clearings for farms or expanding settlements) seem to be changing their feeding preferences to include more monkeys, according to new research.
Other studies have already found that when there is less of their usual prey around, big cats turn to alternatives. The changes in jaguar and puma diets that my colleagues and I recorded may indicate that the populations of these normal prey are shrinking, or that something in the environment has changed to make catching and eating primates easier.
A jaguar in the jungle of southern Mexico. Mardoz/ShutterstockThis change in the diet of large cats could make the disappearance of primate populations in tropical forests like this one in southern Mexico more likely. This would, in turn, make the disappearance of large cats themselves more likely due to a lack of food, threatening the stability of an entire ecosystem.
On the trail of big cats
When forests are cut down or altered by loggers and hunters, primates are particularly affected, as many species depend on tall trees for food, shelter and to chart paths through the forest. Globally, more than 60% of primate species are threatened with extinction.
These changes to forests have also put large predators at risk. Understanding what is happening in these areas can inform more effective conservation measures, which may prevent species from disappearing.
The Uxpanapa valley in southeastern Mexico is one of the last relicts of tall evergreen forest in the country, and is classified as one of the most biodiverse areas in both Mexico and the world. It is home to jaguar, puma and many other species, including two endangered primates: howler and spider monkeys.
Howler monkeys are native to South and Central American forests. David Havel/ShutterstockI led a research team that studied the distribution of primates in the Uxpanapa Valley for the first time. We recorded the number of primates and where they were found, as well as the type of forest they preferred.
Another team looked for large cats with the help of a dog which could detect their faeces, otherwise known as scat. Scat was collected to obtain DNA and determine the species that left it, whether it had any parasites, and what its diet was like. The team found out what prey these large cats were eating by using microscopes to study the hairs left in each scat. Special identification guides can link each kind of animal to its hair – each has a particular colour, pattern and shape.
Large carnivores maintain biodiversity and the functioning of an ecosystem by controlling populations of certain species – for example, herbivores that might otherwise harm trees or prevent forests regrowing. The presence of such predators can indicate an ecosystem’s health. Knowing what top predators are eating can tell us even more about how an ecosystem is functioning.
Jaguar Panthera onca by Ecuadorian artist Juanchi Pérez portraitWhat we found
When we combined the data and information we collected, we began to understand that something out of the ordinary was happening.
Primates were the most frequent prey found in jaguar and puma scats, making up nearly 35% of the remains. Primate remains were also more likely to be found in scats collected from areas with less forest. Spider monkey remains, for example, were more likely to be found in scats collected in areas with more villages, and in forest that was regrowing after being disturbed.
A possible explanation is that where there are more villages, it is likely that there is more hunting and tree-cutting taking place. Where there is more hunting, the prey that jaguar and puma usually prefer might not be as plentiful. And regrowing forests do not offer primates the same protection as tall, untouched forests. These two factors may explain why large cats are eating spider monkeys more often here.
Jaguar and puma will usually eat the prey that is more abundant. If their preferred prey is scarce, they will hunt the species they encounter most. Similar to what we observed with spider monkeys, in areas where there was less tall forest, howler monkey remains were more likely than non-primate prey to be found in the scats, possibly as big cats found it easier to reach primates.
Logging robs monkeys of hiding places from predators. Eduardo Cota/ShutterstockLess tree cover and overhunting of other prey (combined with general habitat loss) could explain the high rates of primate predation we discovered. Nevertheless, we need to continue monitoring these sites to fully understand these changes in large cat diets.
Our results highlight the importance of maintaining tall forest cover to ensure primates and other forest-dependent species can survive. They also raise the urgent need for conservation, before the negative effects of human activities on both primate and large cat populations become irreversible, and the ecosystems they live in are lost.
Written by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
ENDS
Jaguars, currently deemed Near Threatened, face a substantial habitat reduction of up to 25% in just over two decades. This decline stems from rampant deforestation for palm oil, soy, and meat, as well…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Howler Monkey Alouatta guariba
You will hear a Brown Howler #Monkey before you sere one. Heard from several kilometres away these monkeys have a haunting howl that penetrates and rustles the forest canopy. They live in groups…
by Palm Oil DetectivesColombian Red Howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Red howlers are the largest of the howler monkey species. They have dense and vividly coloured fur that ranges from brown to dark red, with gold or bright orange undersides – the colour…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Spider Monkey Ateles hybridus
The enigmatic blue-billed curassow (Crax alberti – local name “Paujil”), endemic to the tropical humid forests of northern Colombia, is the cracid species most threatened with extinction in the wild from #deforestation
by Palm Oil DetectivesYucatán Black Howler Monkey Alouatta pigra
Their range is being rapidly destroyed for palm oil and sugar cane deforestation and mining. They are also facing human persecution and hunting pressures. Yucatán Black Howler Monkeys have been classified as endangered…
by Palm Oil DetectivesLearn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
Global South America S.E. Asia India Africa West Papua & PNGMountain Tapir Tapirus pinchaque
Frill-Necked Lizard Chlamydosaurus kingii
Grey Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum
Ecuadorean Viscacha Lagidium ahuacaense
Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
Read more about RSPO greenwashing
Lying Fake labels Indigenous Land-grabbing Human rights abuses Deforestation Human health hazardsA 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Read moreTake Action in Five Ways
1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.
Enter your email address
Sign Up
Join 3,174 other subscribers2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.
Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings
Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao
Health Physician Dr Evan Allen
The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert
How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy
3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.
https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20
https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20
https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20
4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.
5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here
Pledge your support#animalBehaviour #AnimalBiodiversityNews #animalCommunication #animalCruelty #animalExtinction #animalIntelligence #animalRights #bigcats #biodiversity #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #cats #deforestation #howler #Jaguars #meat #Mexico #mining #monkeys #PalmOil #palmOilDeforestation #palmoil #Primate #primates #pumas #soy #ungulates #vegan
-
Jaguars and Pumas Eat More Monkeys in Damaged Forests
Study finds that in fragmented forests of #Mexico, #bigcats like #jaguars and pumas find it difficult to find traditional prey animals like #ungulates. Instead they focus on harder to catch prey like tree-dwelling #monkeys, forced out of the trees by #palmoil, #soy and #meat #deforestation. This spells bad news for many #primate species of Central and South America and highlights why urgent forest protection is needed. Help species survive and be #Vegan #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife to protect forests and forest animals.
In #Mexico, big #cats like #jaguars 🐆 and #pumas can’t find ungulate prey due to #palmoil #mining #meat #deforestation. They’ve switched to a diet of #monkeys, putting them in peril. Help them, be #vegan #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterWritten by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Monkeys aren’t normally that popular with Jaguars and Puma but wide-spread logging robs primates of hiding places, drastically reducing their numbers.
Monkeys are not usually a popular menu item for big cats. Primates are, after all, hard to catch: living in the canopies of large trees and rarely coming down to the ground. Jaguar and puma have varied diets and will normally hunt the species that are most common where they live, such as deer, peccary (a type of wild pig) and armadillo.
But jaguar and puma living in southern Mexican forests with a high human footprint (where wood and other resources are regularly harvested and there are large clearings for farms or expanding settlements) seem to be changing their feeding preferences to include more monkeys, according to new research.
Other studies have already found that when there is less of their usual prey around, big cats turn to alternatives. The changes in jaguar and puma diets that my colleagues and I recorded may indicate that the populations of these normal prey are shrinking, or that something in the environment has changed to make catching and eating primates easier.
A jaguar in the jungle of southern Mexico. Mardoz/ShutterstockThis change in the diet of large cats could make the disappearance of primate populations in tropical forests like this one in southern Mexico more likely. This would, in turn, make the disappearance of large cats themselves more likely due to a lack of food, threatening the stability of an entire ecosystem.
On the trail of big cats
When forests are cut down or altered by loggers and hunters, primates are particularly affected, as many species depend on tall trees for food, shelter and to chart paths through the forest. Globally, more than 60% of primate species are threatened with extinction.
These changes to forests have also put large predators at risk. Understanding what is happening in these areas can inform more effective conservation measures, which may prevent species from disappearing.
The Uxpanapa valley in southeastern Mexico is one of the last relicts of tall evergreen forest in the country, and is classified as one of the most biodiverse areas in both Mexico and the world. It is home to jaguar, puma and many other species, including two endangered primates: howler and spider monkeys.
Howler monkeys are native to South and Central American forests. David Havel/ShutterstockI led a research team that studied the distribution of primates in the Uxpanapa Valley for the first time. We recorded the number of primates and where they were found, as well as the type of forest they preferred.
Another team looked for large cats with the help of a dog which could detect their faeces, otherwise known as scat. Scat was collected to obtain DNA and determine the species that left it, whether it had any parasites, and what its diet was like. The team found out what prey these large cats were eating by using microscopes to study the hairs left in each scat. Special identification guides can link each kind of animal to its hair – each has a particular colour, pattern and shape.
Large carnivores maintain biodiversity and the functioning of an ecosystem by controlling populations of certain species – for example, herbivores that might otherwise harm trees or prevent forests regrowing. The presence of such predators can indicate an ecosystem’s health. Knowing what top predators are eating can tell us even more about how an ecosystem is functioning.
Jaguar Panthera onca by Ecuadorian artist Juanchi Pérez portraitWhat we found
When we combined the data and information we collected, we began to understand that something out of the ordinary was happening.
Primates were the most frequent prey found in jaguar and puma scats, making up nearly 35% of the remains. Primate remains were also more likely to be found in scats collected from areas with less forest. Spider monkey remains, for example, were more likely to be found in scats collected in areas with more villages, and in forest that was regrowing after being disturbed.
A possible explanation is that where there are more villages, it is likely that there is more hunting and tree-cutting taking place. Where there is more hunting, the prey that jaguar and puma usually prefer might not be as plentiful. And regrowing forests do not offer primates the same protection as tall, untouched forests. These two factors may explain why large cats are eating spider monkeys more often here.
Jaguar and puma will usually eat the prey that is more abundant. If their preferred prey is scarce, they will hunt the species they encounter most. Similar to what we observed with spider monkeys, in areas where there was less tall forest, howler monkey remains were more likely than non-primate prey to be found in the scats, possibly as big cats found it easier to reach primates.
Logging robs monkeys of hiding places from predators. Eduardo Cota/ShutterstockLess tree cover and overhunting of other prey (combined with general habitat loss) could explain the high rates of primate predation we discovered. Nevertheless, we need to continue monitoring these sites to fully understand these changes in large cat diets.
Our results highlight the importance of maintaining tall forest cover to ensure primates and other forest-dependent species can survive. They also raise the urgent need for conservation, before the negative effects of human activities on both primate and large cat populations become irreversible, and the ecosystems they live in are lost.
Written by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
ENDS
Jaguars, currently deemed Near Threatened, face a substantial habitat reduction of up to 25% in just over two decades. This decline stems from rampant deforestation for palm oil, soy, and meat, as well…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Howler Monkey Alouatta guariba
You will hear a Brown Howler #Monkey before you sere one. Heard from several kilometres away these monkeys have a haunting howl that penetrates and rustles the forest canopy. They live in groups…
by Palm Oil DetectivesColombian Red Howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Red howlers are the largest of the howler monkey species. They have dense and vividly coloured fur that ranges from brown to dark red, with gold or bright orange undersides – the colour…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Spider Monkey Ateles hybridus
The enigmatic blue-billed curassow (Crax alberti – local name “Paujil”), endemic to the tropical humid forests of northern Colombia, is the cracid species most threatened with extinction in the wild from #deforestation
by Palm Oil DetectivesYucatán Black Howler Monkey Alouatta pigra
Their range is being rapidly destroyed for palm oil and sugar cane deforestation and mining. They are also facing human persecution and hunting pressures. Yucatán Black Howler Monkeys have been classified as endangered…
by Palm Oil DetectivesLearn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
Global South America S.E. Asia India Africa West Papua & PNGMountain Tapir Tapirus pinchaque
Frill-Necked Lizard Chlamydosaurus kingii
Grey Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum
Ecuadorean Viscacha Lagidium ahuacaense
Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
Read more about RSPO greenwashing
Lying Fake labels Indigenous Land-grabbing Human rights abuses Deforestation Human health hazardsA 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Read moreTake Action in Five Ways
1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.
Enter your email address
Sign Up
Join 3,174 other subscribers2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.
Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings
Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao
Health Physician Dr Evan Allen
The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert
How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy
3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.
https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20
https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20
https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20
4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.
5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here
Pledge your support#animalBehaviour #AnimalBiodiversityNews #animalCommunication #animalCruelty #animalExtinction #animalIntelligence #animalRights #bigcats #biodiversity #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #cats #deforestation #howler #Jaguars #meat #Mexico #mining #monkeys #PalmOil #palmOilDeforestation #palmoil #Primate #primates #pumas #soy #ungulates #vegan
-
Jaguars and Pumas Eat More Monkeys in Damaged Forests
Study finds that in fragmented forests of #Mexico, #bigcats like #jaguars and pumas find it difficult to find traditional prey animals like #ungulates. Instead they focus on harder to catch prey like tree-dwelling #monkeys, forced out of the trees by #palmoil, #soy and #meat #deforestation. This spells bad news for many #primate species of Central and South America and highlights why urgent forest protection is needed. Help species survive and be #Vegan #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife to protect forests and forest animals.
In #Mexico, big #cats like #jaguars 🐆 and #pumas can’t find ungulate prey due to #palmoil #mining #meat #deforestation. They’ve switched to a diet of #monkeys, putting them in peril. Help them, be #vegan #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterWritten by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Monkeys aren’t normally that popular with Jaguars and Puma but wide-spread logging robs primates of hiding places, drastically reducing their numbers.
Monkeys are not usually a popular menu item for big cats. Primates are, after all, hard to catch: living in the canopies of large trees and rarely coming down to the ground. Jaguar and puma have varied diets and will normally hunt the species that are most common where they live, such as deer, peccary (a type of wild pig) and armadillo.
But jaguar and puma living in southern Mexican forests with a high human footprint (where wood and other resources are regularly harvested and there are large clearings for farms or expanding settlements) seem to be changing their feeding preferences to include more monkeys, according to new research.
Other studies have already found that when there is less of their usual prey around, big cats turn to alternatives. The changes in jaguar and puma diets that my colleagues and I recorded may indicate that the populations of these normal prey are shrinking, or that something in the environment has changed to make catching and eating primates easier.
A jaguar in the jungle of southern Mexico. Mardoz/ShutterstockThis change in the diet of large cats could make the disappearance of primate populations in tropical forests like this one in southern Mexico more likely. This would, in turn, make the disappearance of large cats themselves more likely due to a lack of food, threatening the stability of an entire ecosystem.
On the trail of big cats
When forests are cut down or altered by loggers and hunters, primates are particularly affected, as many species depend on tall trees for food, shelter and to chart paths through the forest. Globally, more than 60% of primate species are threatened with extinction.
These changes to forests have also put large predators at risk. Understanding what is happening in these areas can inform more effective conservation measures, which may prevent species from disappearing.
The Uxpanapa valley in southeastern Mexico is one of the last relicts of tall evergreen forest in the country, and is classified as one of the most biodiverse areas in both Mexico and the world. It is home to jaguar, puma and many other species, including two endangered primates: howler and spider monkeys.
Howler monkeys are native to South and Central American forests. David Havel/ShutterstockI led a research team that studied the distribution of primates in the Uxpanapa Valley for the first time. We recorded the number of primates and where they were found, as well as the type of forest they preferred.
Another team looked for large cats with the help of a dog which could detect their faeces, otherwise known as scat. Scat was collected to obtain DNA and determine the species that left it, whether it had any parasites, and what its diet was like. The team found out what prey these large cats were eating by using microscopes to study the hairs left in each scat. Special identification guides can link each kind of animal to its hair – each has a particular colour, pattern and shape.
Large carnivores maintain biodiversity and the functioning of an ecosystem by controlling populations of certain species – for example, herbivores that might otherwise harm trees or prevent forests regrowing. The presence of such predators can indicate an ecosystem’s health. Knowing what top predators are eating can tell us even more about how an ecosystem is functioning.
Jaguar Panthera onca by Ecuadorian artist Juanchi Pérez portraitWhat we found
When we combined the data and information we collected, we began to understand that something out of the ordinary was happening.
Primates were the most frequent prey found in jaguar and puma scats, making up nearly 35% of the remains. Primate remains were also more likely to be found in scats collected from areas with less forest. Spider monkey remains, for example, were more likely to be found in scats collected in areas with more villages, and in forest that was regrowing after being disturbed.
A possible explanation is that where there are more villages, it is likely that there is more hunting and tree-cutting taking place. Where there is more hunting, the prey that jaguar and puma usually prefer might not be as plentiful. And regrowing forests do not offer primates the same protection as tall, untouched forests. These two factors may explain why large cats are eating spider monkeys more often here.
Jaguar and puma will usually eat the prey that is more abundant. If their preferred prey is scarce, they will hunt the species they encounter most. Similar to what we observed with spider monkeys, in areas where there was less tall forest, howler monkey remains were more likely than non-primate prey to be found in the scats, possibly as big cats found it easier to reach primates.
Logging robs monkeys of hiding places from predators. Eduardo Cota/ShutterstockLess tree cover and overhunting of other prey (combined with general habitat loss) could explain the high rates of primate predation we discovered. Nevertheless, we need to continue monitoring these sites to fully understand these changes in large cat diets.
Our results highlight the importance of maintaining tall forest cover to ensure primates and other forest-dependent species can survive. They also raise the urgent need for conservation, before the negative effects of human activities on both primate and large cat populations become irreversible, and the ecosystems they live in are lost.
Written by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
ENDS
Jaguars, currently deemed Near Threatened, face a substantial habitat reduction of up to 25% in just over two decades. This decline stems from rampant deforestation for palm oil, soy, and meat, as well…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Howler Monkey Alouatta guariba
You will hear a Brown Howler #Monkey before you sere one. Heard from several kilometres away these monkeys have a haunting howl that penetrates and rustles the forest canopy. They live in groups…
by Palm Oil DetectivesColombian Red Howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Red howlers are the largest of the howler monkey species. They have dense and vividly coloured fur that ranges from brown to dark red, with gold or bright orange undersides – the colour…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Spider Monkey Ateles hybridus
The enigmatic blue-billed curassow (Crax alberti – local name “Paujil”), endemic to the tropical humid forests of northern Colombia, is the cracid species most threatened with extinction in the wild from #deforestation
by Palm Oil DetectivesYucatán Black Howler Monkey Alouatta pigra
Their range is being rapidly destroyed for palm oil and sugar cane deforestation and mining. They are also facing human persecution and hunting pressures. Yucatán Black Howler Monkeys have been classified as endangered…
by Palm Oil DetectivesLearn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
Global South America S.E. Asia India Africa West Papua & PNGMountain Tapir Tapirus pinchaque
Frill-Necked Lizard Chlamydosaurus kingii
Grey Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum
Ecuadorean Viscacha Lagidium ahuacaense
Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
Read more about RSPO greenwashing
Lying Fake labels Indigenous Land-grabbing Human rights abuses Deforestation Human health hazardsA 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Read moreTake Action in Five Ways
1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.
Enter your email address
Sign Up
Join 3,174 other subscribers2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.
Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings
Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao
Health Physician Dr Evan Allen
The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert
How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy
3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.
https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20
https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20
https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20
4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.
5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here
Pledge your support#animalBehaviour #AnimalBiodiversityNews #animalCommunication #animalCruelty #animalExtinction #animalIntelligence #animalRights #bigcats #biodiversity #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #cats #deforestation #howler #Jaguars #meat #Mexico #mining #monkeys #PalmOil #palmOilDeforestation #palmoil #Primate #primates #pumas #soy #ungulates #vegan
-
Jaguars and Pumas Eat More Monkeys in Damaged Forests
Study finds that in fragmented forests of #Mexico, #bigcats like #jaguars and pumas find it difficult to find traditional prey animals like #ungulates. Instead they focus on harder to catch prey like tree-dwelling #monkeys, forced out of the trees by #palmoil, #soy and #meat #deforestation. This spells bad news for many #primate species of Central and South America and highlights why urgent forest protection is needed. Help species survive and be #Vegan #BoycottPalmOil #Boycott4Wildlife to protect forests and forest animals.
In #Mexico, big #cats like #jaguars 🐆 and #pumas can’t find ungulate prey due to #palmoil #mining #meat #deforestation. They’ve switched to a diet of #monkeys, putting them in peril. Help them, be #vegan #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to Twitter#Primates like #howler 🐒and spider #monkeys in #Mexico 🇲🇽 are declining due to overhunting by big cats: #pumas and #jaguars. They’re forced by #deforestation 🌳 into smaller areas. Help them survive! #Boycottpalmoil 🌴⛔️ #Boycott4Wildlife @palmoildetect https://wp.me/pcFhgU-92D
Share to BlueSky Share to TwitterWritten by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Monkeys aren’t normally that popular with Jaguars and Puma but wide-spread logging robs primates of hiding places, drastically reducing their numbers.
Monkeys are not usually a popular menu item for big cats. Primates are, after all, hard to catch: living in the canopies of large trees and rarely coming down to the ground. Jaguar and puma have varied diets and will normally hunt the species that are most common where they live, such as deer, peccary (a type of wild pig) and armadillo.
But jaguar and puma living in southern Mexican forests with a high human footprint (where wood and other resources are regularly harvested and there are large clearings for farms or expanding settlements) seem to be changing their feeding preferences to include more monkeys, according to new research.
Other studies have already found that when there is less of their usual prey around, big cats turn to alternatives. The changes in jaguar and puma diets that my colleagues and I recorded may indicate that the populations of these normal prey are shrinking, or that something in the environment has changed to make catching and eating primates easier.
A jaguar in the jungle of southern Mexico. Mardoz/ShutterstockThis change in the diet of large cats could make the disappearance of primate populations in tropical forests like this one in southern Mexico more likely. This would, in turn, make the disappearance of large cats themselves more likely due to a lack of food, threatening the stability of an entire ecosystem.
On the trail of big cats
When forests are cut down or altered by loggers and hunters, primates are particularly affected, as many species depend on tall trees for food, shelter and to chart paths through the forest. Globally, more than 60% of primate species are threatened with extinction.
These changes to forests have also put large predators at risk. Understanding what is happening in these areas can inform more effective conservation measures, which may prevent species from disappearing.
The Uxpanapa valley in southeastern Mexico is one of the last relicts of tall evergreen forest in the country, and is classified as one of the most biodiverse areas in both Mexico and the world. It is home to jaguar, puma and many other species, including two endangered primates: howler and spider monkeys.
Howler monkeys are native to South and Central American forests. David Havel/ShutterstockI led a research team that studied the distribution of primates in the Uxpanapa Valley for the first time. We recorded the number of primates and where they were found, as well as the type of forest they preferred.
Another team looked for large cats with the help of a dog which could detect their faeces, otherwise known as scat. Scat was collected to obtain DNA and determine the species that left it, whether it had any parasites, and what its diet was like. The team found out what prey these large cats were eating by using microscopes to study the hairs left in each scat. Special identification guides can link each kind of animal to its hair – each has a particular colour, pattern and shape.
Large carnivores maintain biodiversity and the functioning of an ecosystem by controlling populations of certain species – for example, herbivores that might otherwise harm trees or prevent forests regrowing. The presence of such predators can indicate an ecosystem’s health. Knowing what top predators are eating can tell us even more about how an ecosystem is functioning.
Jaguar Panthera onca by Ecuadorian artist Juanchi Pérez portraitWhat we found
When we combined the data and information we collected, we began to understand that something out of the ordinary was happening.
Primates were the most frequent prey found in jaguar and puma scats, making up nearly 35% of the remains. Primate remains were also more likely to be found in scats collected from areas with less forest. Spider monkey remains, for example, were more likely to be found in scats collected in areas with more villages, and in forest that was regrowing after being disturbed.
A possible explanation is that where there are more villages, it is likely that there is more hunting and tree-cutting taking place. Where there is more hunting, the prey that jaguar and puma usually prefer might not be as plentiful. And regrowing forests do not offer primates the same protection as tall, untouched forests. These two factors may explain why large cats are eating spider monkeys more often here.
Jaguar and puma will usually eat the prey that is more abundant. If their preferred prey is scarce, they will hunt the species they encounter most. Similar to what we observed with spider monkeys, in areas where there was less tall forest, howler monkey remains were more likely than non-primate prey to be found in the scats, possibly as big cats found it easier to reach primates.
Logging robs monkeys of hiding places from predators. Eduardo Cota/ShutterstockLess tree cover and overhunting of other prey (combined with general habitat loss) could explain the high rates of primate predation we discovered. Nevertheless, we need to continue monitoring these sites to fully understand these changes in large cat diets.
Our results highlight the importance of maintaining tall forest cover to ensure primates and other forest-dependent species can survive. They also raise the urgent need for conservation, before the negative effects of human activities on both primate and large cat populations become irreversible, and the ecosystems they live in are lost.
Written by Aralisa Shedden, Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Bournemouth University. Originally published as ‘Big cats eat more monkeys in a damaged tropical forest – and this could threaten their survival’. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
ENDS
Jaguars, currently deemed Near Threatened, face a substantial habitat reduction of up to 25% in just over two decades. This decline stems from rampant deforestation for palm oil, soy, and meat, as well…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Howler Monkey Alouatta guariba
You will hear a Brown Howler #Monkey before you sere one. Heard from several kilometres away these monkeys have a haunting howl that penetrates and rustles the forest canopy. They live in groups…
by Palm Oil DetectivesColombian Red Howler Monkey Alouatta seniculus
Red howlers are the largest of the howler monkey species. They have dense and vividly coloured fur that ranges from brown to dark red, with gold or bright orange undersides – the colour…
by Palm Oil DetectivesBrown Spider Monkey Ateles hybridus
The enigmatic blue-billed curassow (Crax alberti – local name “Paujil”), endemic to the tropical humid forests of northern Colombia, is the cracid species most threatened with extinction in the wild from #deforestation
by Palm Oil DetectivesYucatán Black Howler Monkey Alouatta pigra
Their range is being rapidly destroyed for palm oil and sugar cane deforestation and mining. They are also facing human persecution and hunting pressures. Yucatán Black Howler Monkeys have been classified as endangered…
by Palm Oil DetectivesLearn about other animals endangered by palm oil and other agriculture
Global South America S.E. Asia India Africa West Papua & PNGMountain Tapir Tapirus pinchaque
Frill-Necked Lizard Chlamydosaurus kingii
Grey Crowned Crane Balearica regulorum
Ecuadorean Viscacha Lagidium ahuacaense
Learn about “sustainable” palm oil greenwashing
Read more about RSPO greenwashing
Lying Fake labels Indigenous Land-grabbing Human rights abuses Deforestation Human health hazardsA 2019 World Health Organisation (WHO) report into the palm oil industry and RSPO finds extensive greenwashing of palm oil deforestation and the murder of endangered animals (i.e. biodiversity loss)
Read moreTake Action in Five Ways
1. Join the #Boycott4Wildlife on social media and subscribe to stay in the loop: Share posts from this website to your own network on Twitter, Mastadon, Instagram, Facebook and Youtube using the hashtags #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife.
Enter your email address
Sign Up
Join 3,174 other subscribers2. Contribute stories: Academics, conservationists, scientists, indigenous rights advocates and animal rights advocates working to expose the corruption of the palm oil industry or to save animals can contribute stories to the website.
Mel Lumby: Dedicated Devotee to Borneo’s Living Beings
Anthropologist and Author Dr Sophie Chao
Health Physician Dr Evan Allen
The World’s Most Loved Cup: A Social, Ethical & Environmental History of Coffee by Aviary Doert
How do we stop the world’s ecosystems from going into a death spiral? A #SteadyState Economy
3. Supermarket sleuthing: Next time you’re in the supermarket, take photos of products containing palm oil. Share these to social media along with the hashtags to call out the greenwashing and ecocide of the brands who use palm oil. You can also take photos of palm oil free products and congratulate brands when they go palm oil free.
https://twitter.com/CuriousApe4/status/1526136783557529600?s=20
https://twitter.com/PhillDixon1/status/1749010345555788144?s=20
https://twitter.com/mugabe139/status/1678027567977078784?s=20
4. Take to the streets: Get in touch with Palm Oil Detectives to find out more.
5. Donate: Make a one-off or monthly donation to Palm Oil Detectives as a way of saying thank you and to help pay for ongoing running costs of the website and social media campaigns. Donate here
Pledge your support#animalBehaviour #AnimalBiodiversityNews #animalCommunication #animalCruelty #animalExtinction #animalIntelligence #animalRights #bigcats #biodiversity #Boycott4wildlife #BoycottPalmOil #cats #deforestation #howler #Jaguars #meat #Mexico #mining #monkeys #PalmOil #palmOilDeforestation #palmoil #Primate #primates #pumas #soy #ungulates #vegan
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Wallabies Test match fixtures for 2026 released, Les Kiss faces Eddie Jones in first match as coach of Australia
Incoming Wallabies coach Les Kiss will launch his tenure against Eddie Jones’s Japan, Australia’s 14-Test schedule for 2026…
#NewsBeep #News #Rugby #2026 #ABCSport #all-blacks #AU #Australia #England #Fixtures #France #Ireland #italy #japan #pumas #rugbyunion #Scotland #Sport #sports #Springboks #Testmatch #Wales #Wallabies
https://www.newsbeep.com/au/309432/ -
Para bien ✅ y para mal ❌ #Deportes #Pumas #Mundial #Selección
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¡Excelente domingo!
Y esto tenemos en #LaPortada⚽️ Los #Rayados dejan dudas tras empatar en casa con los #Pumas.
🏎️ Sale #Verstappen en la punta hoy en el GP de EU.
#F1 -
Este sábado se jugó la última jornada de #TheRugbyChampionship, resultando ganador final Sudáfrica, en un torneo disputadísimo donde ha sido necesario esperar hasta el último partido para decidirlo.
Primero se jugó el Australia-Nueva Zelanda, donde una vez más los #Wallabies le pusieron las cosas muy difíciles a los #AllBlacks, pero como ya es costumbre no fue suficiente. Resultado: 14-28.
Este resultado obligaba a Sudáfrica a ganar a Argentina para hacer valer un único bonus point de ventaja, o en su lugar su mejor diferencia de puntaje. El partido se jugó a miles de kilómetros de sus países, en la "catedral" de Twickenham en Londres, dando al evento una repercusión global.
Como se esperaba, los #Pumas le pusieron las cosas realmente duras a los #Springboks, los cuales cedieron en una primera parte con muchas dudas (13-10) para finalmente imponerse por solo dos puntos (27-29), después de que el casi infalible Santiago Carreras mandase al poste un golpe de castigo que podría haber dado la vuelta al marcador.
Así queda la clasificación de este apasionante campeonato:
- Sudáfrica: 19 puntos con +57 de tanteo
- Nueva Zelanda: 19 (+8)
- Australia: 11 (-13)
- Argentina: 10 (-52)
#rugby -
https://www.europesays.com/fr/438918/ avant d’affronter le XV de France en novembre, l’Afrique du Sud réalise le doublé pour la première fois #AfriqueDuSud #Argentine #F1 #Formula1 #Formula1 #Formule1 #Formule1 #FR #France #Pumas #RugbyChampionship #Sports #Springboks
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La penúltima fecha de #TheRugbyChampionship llegaba con los equipos muy igualados en la tabla, y en este caso los favoritos no fallaron.
En el Eden Park de Auckland, Nueva Zelanda y Australia jugaron un partido disputadísimo, que solo se decantó por los #AllBlacks en los últimos minutos (33-24), además con un bonus point. Los #Wallabies cada vez están más cerca de asaltar el estadio nacional neozelandés, que se les resiste desde los años 80 del siglo pasado. Pero será en otra ocasión.
Por su parte, Sudáfrica fue muy superior a Argentina, que solo pudo resistir la primera parte (25-23), gracias a varios errores infantiles de los africanos. En la segunda, los #Springboks fueron una apisonadora y terminaron apalizando a los #Pumas por 67-30 (9-3 en ensayos). También consiguen en bonus point, que puede valer oro.
En la última jornada, este sábado, Sudáfrica y Nueva Zelanda se van a jugar el campeonato que ahora lideran los africanos por un solo punto. Ambos serán visitantes. Ese punto de ventaja puede ser decisivo, pero ojo con los #Pumas que han demostrado ser un duro rival en casa.
Australia-Nueva Zelanda
Argentina-Sudáfrica
#rugby -
Os #springboks massacraram os #pumas tal como fizeram com os #AllBlacks...
Quem pode parar esses caras? Melhor #rugby do mundo nos últimos 8 anos...
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Pumas Executive: Rayados Brazenly 'Stole' Anthony Martial Transfer
#AnthonyMartial #football #PlayerTransfer #Pumas #Rayados
https://blazetrends.com/pumas-executive-rayados-brazenly-stole-anthony-martial-transfer/?fsp_sid=126217 -
En el partido estrella de la tercera jornada de #TheRugbyChampionship, Sudáfrica intentó todo para asaltar Eden Park, donde no ganan desde hace la friolera de 87 años. Los #AllBlacks se resistieron con uñas y dientes, y hasta el último minuto pudo llegar el empate. Finalmente, Nueva Zelanda 24 - Sudáfrica 17.
Por su parte, Australia salvó los muebles frente a Argentina en el minuto 6 de prolongación (28-24). Los #Pumas confirmaron su buen momento de forma, pero les faltó un poco de ambición, jugando a conservar en muchos momentos.
Este sábado se repetirán tan igualados cruces en la cuarta jornada. El campeonato sigue abierto para los cuatro. ¡Saltarán chispas! #rugby -
En la segunda jornada de #TheRugbyChampionship, se repitieron los emparejamientos de la primera, pero no los resultados.
Los #Springboks se tomaron revancha de la dolorosa derrota de la semana pasada, ganando en un partido muy igualado y disputadísimo, donde los #Wallabies pagaron caro el desacierto a palos. Sudáfrica 30 - Australia 22.
Por su parte, los #Pumas lograron un triunfo histórico en Buenos Aires, después de salir apalizados por los #AllBlacks en el partido anterior. Argentina 29 - Nueva Zelanda 23.
Gracias a los bonus points, Nueva Zelanda lidera una clasificación muy igualada. El sábado 6, Australia recibirá a Argentina y Nueva Zelanda a Sudáfrica. #rugby -
El arranque de #TheRugbyChampionship no pudo ser más espectacular. Dos auténticos partidazos.
En Johannesburgo, Australia dio la campanada ganando a domicilio a Sudáfrica. El campeón del mundo salió en tromba, logrando un 22-0 de partida. Cuando todo apuntaba a paliza, los #Wallabies remontaron en una gran segunda parte, donde lograron nada menos que cinco ensayos, dejando el marcador en 22-38. Hacía más de dos décadas que los australianos no batían a los #Springboks en su casa.
Por su parte, Argentina y Nueva Zelanda se enfrentaron en el precioso estadio de Córdoba. A pesar del resultado abultado (24-41), los #Pumas jugaron un partido muy serio y tuvieron a raya a los #AllBlacks durante muchas fases del partido, que resultó un magnífico un espectáculo.
El próximo sábado, los mismos emparejamientos se volverán a enfrentar en la segunda jornada.
#rugby -
Celso Borges confía en remontar ante Pumas: “No es imposible”
Pese a la desventaja de 2-0 con la que Alajuelense regresa de su visita a Pumas, el capitán rojinegro, Celso Borges, confía en que pueden darle vuelta a la serie. El partido de vuelta se disputará el jueves 13 de marzo en el estadio Alejandro Morera Soto. “Se complica, pero no es imposible. Tenemos material […]
#Alajuelense #CelsoBorges #Concacaf #CopaDeCampeones #Deportes #Fútbol #Pumas #VisualB
https://www.crhoy.com/deportes/celso-borges-confia-en-remontar-ante-pumas-no-es-imposible/
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Die Vogelgrippe-Situation hat sich nur verschlechtert
Die #Vogelgrippe #H5N1 war bisher eine Krise, die langsam brodelte. Die Situation verschlechterte sich im Jahr 2021, als Vögel das Virus von #Europa nach #Amerika brachten, was eine Wiederholung von 2014 war, als asiatische Zugvögel in den Vereinigten Staaten und #Kanada weit verbreitete Ausbrüche auslösten. Beide Ereignisse führten zu einer #Masseninfektion von #Hausgeflügel und zur Keulung von Millionen von Hühnern. Die Ausbrüche, die 2021 begannen und bis heute andauern, weisen jedoch eine zusätzliche Besonderheit auf: Dieses Mal sind auch #Säugetiere wie #Robben und #Großkatzen in großer Zahl infiziert worden und wurden tot an Stränden, in Zoos und anderswo aufgefunden.Das vergangene Jahr erwies sich als ein weiterer Wendepunkt für das Virus, als es in Hunderten von US-#Rinderherden und bei #Arbeitern, die diese betreuten, nachgewiesen wurde. Mittlerweile ist klar, dass es keinen Grund für Optimismus gibt, dass H5N1 als geringfügiges Ärgernis verschwinden wird. Im Gegenteil, die Situation hat sich nur verschlechtert.
Da viele Anzeichen auf eine zukünftige #Grippepandemie hindeuten, wird der Schlüssel zur Bekämpfung darin bestehen, einen freien Datenfluss zu gewährleisten, der eine Frühwarnung ermöglicht, und die Ressourcen für umfassende Tests und die #Analyse der genetischen Entwicklung von H5N1 zu erhöhen. Dies muss sowohl global als auch national geschehen – aber an einem kritischen Punkt hat Präsident Donald #Trump die Vereinigten Staaten stattdessen von den internationalen Gesundheitsbemühungen zurückgezogen und seinen Fehltritt noch verschlimmert, indem er die Kommunikation, die Kapazitäten und die Budgets der nationalen #Gesundheitsbehörden ins Visier nahm. Die Wahrscheinlichkeit steigt, dass die Welt eine Gelegenheit verpasst, eine potenzielle #Pandemie zu bekämpfen, bevor sie ausbricht.
Die #Infektion mit dem #Vogelgrippevirus hat sich mit beispielloser Geschwindigkeit bei Wild- und Hausvögeln sowie bei #Meeressäugern und #Landsäugetieren ausgebreitet. Bei einem jüngsten und beängstigenden Vorfall Ende 2024 starben von den 37 #Großkatzen, die in einem Schutzgebiet in #Shelton, #Washington, untergebracht waren, darunter #Pumas, #Rotluchse und #Tiger, 20 an einer Infektion mit dem Virus, die meisten innerhalb von 24 Stunden. H5N1 scheint sich durch #Atemwegssekrete und den Kontakt mit infizierten #Zugvögeln verbreitet zu haben.
Der Silberstreif am Horizont von H5N1 ist, dass #Menschen, die erkrankten Tieren ausgesetzt sind, sich zwar mit dem Virus anstecken können, aber nach dem derzeitigen Kenntnisstand der Forscher nicht ohne Weiteres andere Menschen infizieren können. Das könnte sich jedoch ändern, wenn die Infektionszahlen in die Höhe schnellen. Das Virus stellt eine ernsthafte #Bedrohung dar.
Experten für öffentliche #Gesundheit waren zu Recht besorgt, als das Virus 2024 in US-#Milchviehbeständen auftauchte. Es hat die Hälfte der fast 1.000 Menschen getötet, die sich seit Anfang der 2000er Jahre damit infiziert haben, überwiegend in #Südostasien. Dort konnte es sich rasch ausbreiten und bisher fast tausend Herden infizieren. Anders als bei Wildvögeln oder anderen #Tierarten arbeiten Menschen eng mit #Milchvieh zusammen. Menschen haben sich das Virus auch direkt von Vögeln eingefangen. Während #Milchbauern bisher nur leichte Infektionen erlitten haben, verliefen die Erkrankungen von zwei Personen, die sich bei toten oder infizierten Wild- oder Hausvögeln mit dem Virus angesteckt hatten, weitaus schlimmer. Ein Patient aus #Louisiana starb; ein anderer in British Columbia erholte sich nur nach einem außergewöhnlichen medizinischen Eingriff. In beiden Fällen zeigten virale #RNA-Sequenzen #Mutationen, die eine effektive Bindung an Zellen in den menschlichen Atemwegen ermöglichen könnten. Bei Rindern und zahlreichen anderen Tierarten erhält das Virus zahlreiche Gelegenheiten, sich weiterzuentwickeln und gefährlicher zu werden.
Besonders besorgniserregend: Wenn zwei verschiedene #Virusstämme einen einzelnen Wirt gleichzeitig infizieren, können sie Teile ihres #Genoms austauschen, ein Prozess, der als #Reassortment bezeichnet wird. Dadurch kann ein neues Virus mit einer anderen Kombination von Eigenschaften entstehen. Die #Schweinegrippe-Epidemie (#H1N1) von 1985 bis 1989 wurde beispielsweise durch ein Virus verursacht, das durch den Austausch von #Genomsegmenten in einem #Schwein entstand, das gleichzeitig mit einem menschlichen und einem #Vogelvirusstamm infiziert war. Diese Art der Vermischung bei Tieren wird durch den aktuellen Ausbruch der #Vogelgrippe, der parallel zu einer extrem starken saisonalen #Grippewelle auftritt, immer wahrscheinlicher.
Derzeit werden die meisten Tests auf H5N1 bei symptomatischen Fällen durchgeführt. Infizierte Tiere und Menschen können jedoch bereits Tage vor dem Auftreten von Symptomen eine hohe #Viruslast aufweisen. Arbeiter in Milch- und Geflügelfarmen zögern jedoch, sich testen zu lassen, aus Angst, ihren #Arbeitsplatz zu verlieren. Obwohl die Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) kürzlich ihre Empfehlungen geändert haben, um sicherzustellen, dass auch asymptomatische #Landarbeiter getestet werden, ist die Anzahl der durchgeführten Tests nach wie vor unzureichend. Die #CDC hat sich kürzlich mit kommerziellen Testlabors zusammengetan, um die Überwachung zu verbessern, und auch einzelne Bundesstaaten führen vermehrt Tests an #Milch asymptomatischer Herden durch.
Es sind aggressive Tests zur #Früherkennung einer auf den Menschen übertragbaren Form von H5N1 erforderlich, aber das ist nur ein Teil eines jeden notwendigen Reaktionsplans: Überwachung ohne #Kommunikation ist nutzlos. Die Trump-Regierung hat im Rahmen eines allgemeinen Angriffs auf den Haushalt von #Gesundheitsbehörden und deren wissenschaftliche Unabhängigkeit versucht, die Kommunikation im Bereich der öffentlichen Gesundheit auf Bundesebene einzuschränken – selbst bei lebenswichtigen Informationen über H5N1.
Nach der Amtseinführung verhinderte die Regierung die Veröffentlichung des viel gepriesenen Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report der CDC, der seit Jahrzehnten regelmäßig und auch nach einem Präsidentenwechsel ohne Unterbrechung veröffentlicht worden war. Die erste Ausgabe nach der Amtseinführung sollte angeblich Studien über H5N1 enthalten. Als die Veröffentlichung wieder aufgenommen wurde, waren diese nicht enthalten (obwohl eine inzwischen veröffentlicht wurde, in der das #Infektionsrisiko für Tierärzte, die mit infizierten Tieren arbeiten, aufgezeigt wird).
Seitdem sickern Daten aus verschiedenen Quellen durch.
Anfang dieses Monats gab das #Landwirtschaftsministerium bekannt, dass ein zweiter H5N1-Stamm von Vögeln auf drei #Milchviehherden in #Nevada übergesprungen war. Dabei handelte es sich um den tödlicheren D1.1-Stamm, der Mutationen aufweist, die eine leichtere Ausbreitung des Virus bei Säugetieren ermöglichen könnten, im Gegensatz zum milderen B3.13-Stamm, der seit letztem Sommer Herden infiziert. Die Kühe in Nevada zeigten bei den Tests keine Symptome, aber die frühzeitige Erkennung durch das Milchuntersuchungsprogramm des #Landwirtschaftsministeriums von Nevada ermöglichte es den Beamten, die betroffenen Herden unter #Quarantäne zu stellen und so die Ausbreitung der #Infektion einzudämmen.
Da der gefährlichere D1.1-Stamm nun bei nordamerikanischen Zugvögeln vorherrscht, ist das, was in Nevada geschah – die zweite dokumentierte Übertragung von H5N1 von Vögeln auf Rinder – keine Überraschung. Es könnte jedoch sein, dass dieses Virus für Überraschungen sorgt, wenn die Tests bei nicht symptomatischen Menschen und Tieren weiterhin unzureichend sind, insbesondere da die Trump-Regierung die globale Zusammenarbeit der USA einschränkt und der #Datenfluss aus den USA und internationalen Organisationen, die Infektionen und die Entwicklung des Virus identifizieren, auf ein Rinnsal verlangsamt wird oder ganz zum Erliegen kommt.
Die CDC und die #Weltgesundheitsorganisation (WHO) sind maßgeblich daran beteiligt, die sich entwickelnde H5N1-Bedrohung im Auge zu behalten. Kein Teil der Welt ist vor zirkulierenden pandemischen Viren geschützt, und zu wissen, was sie sind und wo sie sich befinden, ist entscheidend für den Schutz der #Gesundheit der Amerikaner und der Menschen auf der ganzen Welt.
In der Vergangenheit haben die CDC und die WHO einen aktiven #Datenaustausch im Zusammenhang mit der globalen Krankheitsüberwachung betrieben. Die Kommunikation zwischen den Behörden erfolgte in Foren wie Beratungsgremien und Notfallteams. Ende Januar jedoch unterband die Trump-Regierung die Kommunikation zwischen CDC-Mitarbeitern und der WHO und zog Mitarbeiter ab, die in WHO-Büros arbeiteten. Die #Regierung ordnete außerdem die Einstellung der finanziellen Unterstützung der USA für die WHO an, wobei diese Anordnung eine einjährige Schonfrist vorsieht. Die Anordnung, die Kommunikation einzustellen, trat jedoch sofort in Kraft. Die Vereinigten Staaten sind nicht mehr Teil der globalen Diskussion darüber, wie auf eine wachsende und potenziell explosive Krankheitsbedrohung reagiert werden soll. Die #Amerikaner haben den verlässlichen Einblick in das Verhalten von H5N1 außerhalb der US-Grenzen verloren und werden möglicherweise die Chance verpassen, Schutzmaßnahmen zu ergreifen.
Natürlich ist das globale #Gesundheitssystem fehlerhaft. Die WHO und die CDC wurden für ihre Lücken und Verzögerungen bei der Vorsorge und Reaktion in den Tagen nach dem Auftreten von #COVID19 kritisiert. Die #WHO wurde beschuldigt, zu einem Werkzeug politischer Agenden zu werden, und dafür kritisiert, dass sie erst dann #Reisebeschränkungen erlassen hat, als die Pandemie bereits weltweit wütete. Währenddessen verzögerte bei der CDC ein fehlerhafter #COVID-Test, der frühzeitig veröffentlicht wurde, die genaue Meldung von Fällen. Das System muss repariert und nicht aufgegeben werden, insbesondere da die H5N1-Bedrohung weiter eskaliert.
Da die Zahl der mit dem #Virus infizierten #Vögel und #Säugetiere weiterhin explosionsartig ansteigt, ist das Auftreten eines übertragbaren pandemischen Stammes keine Frage des „ob“, sondern des „wann“. Um Michael Osterholm, den Direktor des Zentrums für #Infektionskrankheitenforschung und -politik an der Universität von #Minnesota, zu zitieren: „Die Pandemieuhr tickt. Wir wissen nur nicht, wie spät es ist.“
Quelle: Lucy Shapiro, 20. Februar 2025 in Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: The bird flu outlook has only gotten worse
Übersetzung: Thomas Trueten [Nicht authorisiert]
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¡Dejan atrás a Rayados! 🙌🏻
Pumas venció en penales a Monterrey y estará en la siguiente fase de la Leagues Cup.
El club regio no metió ninguna pena máxima…
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It's game day!
This will be a good one.
We don't usually do great at the Akron but we're in great shape this time (they are too but we're better of course 😏).
Rumor has it #Chicharito is gonna make his first appearance since he came back from #MLS. Don't think he'll see any action though, but that is something to look out for for neutrals. Not to mention Chino returning to play (hopefully) in Guadalajara.
Let's get the 3 points! 💪
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Did not go to the pub on Friday night just to watch the #AllBlacks eviscerate the poor #Pumas. They never had a real chance, did they?
Impressive display of skills and athletics by the ABs, and great to see them advance to the finals of these #RugbyWorlds.
As for tonight's game, could some #Springbok please drill #OwenFarrell deep into the pitch of the Stade de France? That would make my Saturday evening, really. Can't stand this master of unfair shoulder-to-face tackles and cheap shots. -
Did not go to the pub on Friday night just to watch the #AllBlacks eviscerate the poor #Pumas. They never had a real chance, did they?
Impressive display of skills and athletics by the ABs, and great to see them advance to the finals of these #RugbyWorlds.
As for tonight's game, could some #Springbok please drill #OwenFarrell deep into the pitch of the Stade de France? That would make my Saturday evening, really. Can't stand this master of unfair shoulder-to-face tackles and cheap shots. -
Did not go to the pub on Friday night just to watch the #AllBlacks eviscerate the poor #Pumas. They never had a real chance, did they?
Impressive display of skills and athletics by the ABs, and great to see them advance to the finals of these #RugbyWorlds.
As for tonight's game, could some #Springbok please drill #OwenFarrell deep into the pitch of the Stade de France? That would make my Saturday evening, really. Can't stand this master of unfair shoulder-to-face tackles and cheap shots. -
Póki co – może poza pierwszym spotkaniem, ale tutaj z racji sympatii do #AllBlacks – poprawnie typowałem zwycięzców, ale to, co #IRE (Irlandia) zrobiła z #ROU (Rumunią)... :) Potwierdzili tym samym, że chcą zagrać wszystkie mecze turnieju. Byłoby ciekawie - jakaś odmiana wśród "etatowych" medalistów.
Tymczasem #ENG z czerwoną kartką w 9. minucie. #ARG #Pumas w formie.
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Love this study:
‘Garden to Hunt’: Panthera Study Shows #Pumas Utilize Sly Strategy of Fertilizing Plants That Recruit #Prey to Hunting Hotspots.
https://panthera.org/newsroom/garden-hunt-panthera-study-shows-pumas-utilize-sly-strategy-fertilizing-plants-recruit
#research #science #ecology #felids #cougars #MountainLions #carnivores