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2010-06-14 05:09:49
Wed Jun 9, 9:29 pm ET
GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters Life!) Biologists tracking jaguars in the Guatemalan
jungle might smell nice but it's all in the name of science, with researchers
finding the Calvin Klein cologne Obsession for Men attracts big cats.
Biologists Rony Garcia and Jose Moreira from the Wildlife Conservation
Society's (WCS) Jaguar Conservation Program say they use hidden cameras as a
primary source for observing and tracking jaguars in Guatemala's Maya Biosphere
Reserve.
But they also rely on Obsession for Men, a cologne known for its complex scent,
to help lure then research and hopefully ultimately preserve jaguars in the
Central American country.
"The method we are using to study the jaguars here in Guatemala is a
non-invasive method which is based on photographing the individuals by using
camera traps," Moreira told Reuters Television.
"It has been very useful using Obsession (for Men) to get the jaguars in front
of these camera traps ... and that allows us to estimate with greater
confidence the genders and the numbers that live in each studied site."
The discovery that Obsession for Men acted as a magnet for jaguars was the
result of an experiment by the WCS's Bronx Zoo in New York.
The WCS was looking for ways to get cheetahs in front of camera traps, and,
after several years of testing with different fragrances, found spraying the
musky Obsession For Men near the heat-and-motion-sensitive cameras drew the
cats for longer than other scents.
They also tried out about 23 other fragrances but Obsession for Men kept the
cats' attention for longest with Nina Ricci's L'Air du Temps coming second.
The practice made its way down to Guatemala, where Garcia and Moreira said they
have been recording similar success in the wild since 2007, allowing them to
track jaguars and even record their mating rituals.
Garcia said the results will be invaluable to conservation efforts.
"These camera traps help us to identify how many jaguars are living in this
area ... (and) helps us to have control over the population and lets us say to
the government, to the public, that Laguna del Tigre still deserves
conservation," he said.
The WCS said it tentatively plans to expand the use of the cologne in programs
in Venezuela, Nicaragua, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador in coming years.
(Writing by Reuters Television, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)