Poging GOUD - Vrij
BEASTS OF SOUTHERN THE WILD
Condé Nast Traveler US
|September - October 2025
The dense wetland of Brazil's Pantanal is home to some of the most elusive hemisphere. But the area's vast and ecosystem is under threat. Megan Spurrell explores the role travel can play in its preservation
A female jaguar is shrouded by palm fronds just 10 feet away from our safari vehicle.
She bites into the hind leg of a cow carcass, sending a loud snap through the thick air. As our car idles, Lucas Nascimento Morgado, a young biologist who works for a jaguar NGO called Onçafari here in the southern Brazilian Pantanal, grins giddily. “This is a special sighting, my friends,” he says. Over the next week he'll repeat this a lot, and it’s always true.
The Pantanal is the world’s largest tropical wetland, stretching across more than 42 million acres and two states in Brazil, with floodplains that seep into Paraguay and Bolivia. The presence of jaguars here predates the Ice Age, meaning the cats once hunted alongside saber-toothed tigers; they have since coexisted with Indigenous peoples like the Terena and the Guató as well as the cattle ranchers from nearby Paraguay and elsewhere in Brazil who began settling in the region 300 years ago. In the past century, though, the jaguar population has been significantly threatened by hunters and environmental loss, as the Pantanal has become a victim of the changing climate. But in a land that, for many years, has been viewed as a resource from which to wring sellable goods, nascent ecotourism efforts have begun to illuminate a future in which the Pantanal is protected by a tourism infrastructure that puts more food on the tables of local families than ranching alone could, without endangering one of the world’s great floodplains.
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