Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚥馃嚱 Mexico

The jaguar - Mexico's biggest cat

A powerful spotted hunter that swims, climbs and stalks the rainforest

A jaguar with a golden spotted coat standing alert in the forest

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The jaguar is the biggest cat in the Americas - and the third biggest in the world, after the tiger and the lion. Jaguars live in the rainforests of southern Mexico, prowling at dawn and dusk. The Maya and the Aztecs both thought of the jaguar as one of the most powerful animals on Earth.

Tell me more

A jaguar looks a bit like a leopard, but its spots are different. They are called 'rosettes' - small black rings with a dot in the middle, like little flowers. Every jaguar's pattern is unique, like a fingerprint. From far away the rosettes break up the cat's outline so you can walk right past one without seeing it.

Jaguars love water. Unlike most cats they swim happily and often, paddling across rivers and even diving to grab fish. Their favourite habitat in Mexico is the wet, green Selva Maya - a vast rainforest in the south that stretches into Guatemala and Belize.

Their bite is famous. A jaguar has the strongest jaws of any big cat for its size. They are the only cats that often kill by biting straight through the skull, instead of the throat. Their head looks slightly square and chunky, which is why their bite is so powerful.

Jaguars were sacred to ancient Mexican civilisations. The Aztecs had warrior groups called 'jaguar warriors' who wore real jaguar-skin costumes. Maya temples have jaguar heads carved into them. Today, the jaguar is protected and is the symbol of wildlife reserves across southern Mexico.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How might a spotty coat help a jaguar hide in a rainforest full of dappled light?
  2. 02Most cats hate water. Why might a jungle cat like the jaguar be different?
  3. 03Why do you think some people in the past wore costumes of animals they thought were powerful?
Try this

Classroom activity

Each pupil draws their own jaguar with a unique rosette pattern - same animal, different spots. Hold them up at the front of the class. Can you tell yours apart? Which patterns hide best against a leafy background?