Zürcher Nachrichten - US-Mexico border wall threatening rare wildlife

EUR -
AED 4.093506
AFN 76.885697
ALL 99.156844
AMD 431.61136
ANG 2.009212
AOA 1033.996627
ARS 1072.997336
AUD 1.641238
AWG 2.006096
AZN 1.894898
BAM 1.953947
BBD 2.250965
BDT 133.223643
BGN 1.952711
BHD 0.420041
BIF 3231.776803
BMD 1.114498
BND 1.440534
BOB 7.703555
BRL 6.123719
BSD 1.114843
BTN 93.176654
BWP 14.737155
BYN 3.64844
BYR 21844.159752
BZD 2.247128
CAD 1.513226
CDF 3199.72349
CHF 0.948009
CLF 0.037589
CLP 1037.207355
CNY 7.861562
CNH 7.857762
COP 4641.270973
CRC 578.440993
CUC 1.114498
CUP 29.534196
CVE 110.159036
CZK 25.061677
DJF 198.518152
DKK 7.458688
DOP 66.916533
DZD 147.443868
EGP 54.087145
ERN 16.717469
ETB 129.365881
FJD 2.455963
FKP 0.848756
GBP 0.838887
GEL 3.04302
GGP 0.848756
GHS 17.526063
GIP 0.848756
GMD 76.360453
GNF 9631.735079
GTQ 8.617904
GYD 233.214621
HKD 8.68467
HNL 27.654771
HRK 7.577484
HTG 147.097844
HUF 393.219452
IDR 16938.139791
ILS 4.215003
IMP 0.848756
INR 93.066206
IQD 1460.414859
IRR 46912.005489
ISK 152.106934
JEP 0.848756
JMD 175.153874
JOD 0.78973
JPY 160.913487
KES 143.815085
KGS 93.883634
KHR 4527.705666
KMF 491.883517
KPW 1003.04752
KRW 1489.253392
KWD 0.340031
KYD 0.929027
KZT 534.493464
LAK 24617.20987
LBP 99832.321807
LKR 340.137394
LRD 222.964527
LSL 19.571513
LTL 3.290823
LVL 0.674149
LYD 5.294169
MAD 10.810335
MDL 19.453724
MGA 5042.127276
MKD 61.543927
MMK 3619.845856
MNT 3787.063972
MOP 8.948752
MRU 44.304377
MUR 51.133282
MVR 17.119128
MWK 1932.93201
MXN 21.562748
MYR 4.686458
MZN 71.160467
NAD 19.571337
NGN 1827.163772
NIO 41.030532
NOK 11.743114
NPR 149.085599
NZD 1.79238
OMR 0.429047
PAB 1.114823
PEN 4.178581
PGK 4.364018
PHP 62.09258
PKR 309.759007
PLN 4.271826
PYG 8697.750557
QAR 4.064445
RON 4.974451
RSD 117.076905
RUB 103.223004
RWF 1502.88806
SAR 4.182122
SBD 9.258064
SCR 14.81171
SDG 670.372494
SEK 11.382251
SGD 1.441191
SHP 0.848756
SLE 25.463272
SLL 23370.458959
SOS 637.101453
SRD 33.663463
STD 23067.857331
SVC 9.754617
SYP 2800.209454
SZL 19.578606
THB 36.808558
TJS 11.850548
TMT 3.900743
TND 3.377996
TOP 2.610264
TRY 38.023817
TTD 7.582672
TWD 35.665604
TZS 3038.346537
UAH 46.080848
UGX 4130.23089
USD 1.114498
UYU 46.065689
UZS 14186.544671
VEF 4037327.360851
VES 40.96537
VND 27422.221975
VUV 132.315435
WST 3.117767
XAF 655.323694
XAG 0.035728
XAU 0.000426
XCD 3.011987
XDR 0.826216
XOF 655.326631
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.9867
ZAR 19.526231
ZMK 10031.815557
ZMW 29.514477
ZWL 358.867884
  • RIO

    -1.3800

    63.8

    -2.16%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -1.1190

    143.571

    -0.78%

  • BTI

    -0.1250

    37.445

    -0.33%

  • SCS

    -0.2600

    13.05

    -1.99%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    25.04

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    0.8000

    69.63

    +1.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    6.96

    +0.14%

  • BP

    -0.0450

    32.715

    -0.14%

  • RBGPF

    3.5000

    60.5

    +5.79%

  • JRI

    -0.0750

    13.325

    -0.56%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    34.91

    -0.8%

  • GSK

    -0.6250

    40.995

    -1.52%

  • RELX

    -0.0350

    48.095

    -0.07%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    78.66

    -0.31%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    10.02

    -0.4%

US-Mexico border wall threatening rare wildlife
US-Mexico border wall threatening rare wildlife / Photo: VALERIE MACON - AFP

US-Mexico border wall threatening rare wildlife

Jaguars don't understand borders, but where the United States meets Mexico, they are having to adapt to them.

Text size:

Once the master of the Sonoran Desert, the animal is now struggling to survive in a landscape cut in two by a wall.

The barrier, which former US president Donald Trump boasted he would make "impenetrable," does little to discourage the thousands of people from Latin America, Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe who arrive in the country every day, fleeing poverty and persecution.

But, say conservationists, the fencing erected by successive administrations in Washington is deadly to wildlife.

"One of the most important things for the health of ecosystems is habitat connectivity," says Laiken Jordahl from the Center for Biological Diversity.

"Animals need to be able to roam, to find food, water, to find mates. Having wide expanses of connected landscape is critical."

A metal fence rises 30 feet (9 meters) at the southern edge of the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, a 117,000-acre (47,000-hectare) home for threatened and endangered plants and animals in Arizona.

The barrier marks the end of the United States, but not the end of the habitat for dozens of species, including American antelope, mule deer, lynx, mountain lions and jaguars.

"This wall is clearly going to sever this entire ecosystem from all of the wild lands in Mexico that will make animals on this side and that side of the wall more vulnerable to drought, to climate change, to inbreeding," Jordahl said.

Scientists think there are about 150 jaguars on the Mexican side; there have been only seven documented sightings on the American side in recent decades.

"One individual jaguar can roam hundreds or thousands of acres, they can walk hundreds of miles in a matter of days. They need massive landscapes available to them," said Jordahl.

"Jaguars are coming up to Arizona from Sonora in Mexico, but a lot of them are being met with a solid border wall."

- 'Undercutting' -

A physical barrier at the US-Mexico border has been in the works for decades along stretches of the 2,000-mile (3,000-kilometer) frontier.

It is present in national parks, nature reserves and on indigenous lands in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California, ending a few yards (meters) out into the Pacific Ocean.

Each piece of the jigsaw reveals the administration that put it there -- Trump's section of wall, for example, stands the highest, a reflection of the Republican's signature pledge to shutter the border.

Trump's White House repealed or circumvented rules designed to lessen environmental impacts, causing "irreparable" damage in nature reserves and on indigenous lands, according to a report released in September by the Government Accountability Office, the auditing arm of Congress.

Democrat Joe Biden halted the expansion of the wall when he came to office in 2021, but in October his administration authorized the closing of some gaps, mainly in Arizona.

For Jordahl, the rush to erect the barrier undermined years of careful conservation work by the government.

"The federal government has put hundreds of millions of dollars into protecting landscapes around the border, into recovering animals like the Mexican gray wolf and the jaguar.

"But at the same time, they're undercutting all of those goals by building this impermeable structure that stops... migrations dead in their tracks.

"Essentially, we're pulling thread after thread out of this patchwork that is the intact ecosystem," said Jordahl.

"It's only a matter of time until it all does start to unravel."

N.Zaugg--NZN