This adorable jaguar cub lost her mother and had to be rescued. She loves to get attention, but that doesn't mean she can be trusted. Jaguars are not pets. They are wild animals, and even when humanized, they still have that wild nature inside. It's OK to give her a scratch through the fence, as long as you watch your fingers, but nobody goes in with her, as she has left her previous caretaker with some big scars when she didn't let her have her backpack. This is a temporary enclosure, because she was able to climb out of her big one.

The Jaguar (Panthera onca) is the largest cat species in the American continent, and the third largest in the world. It shares the Panthera genus with four other big cats: the Lion (Panthera leo), the Tiger (Panthera tigris), the Leopard (Panthera pardus) and the Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia).

It has a stocky body and short, thick and powerful limbs, making the jaguar a great climber and swimmer. The proportionally bigger head grants it an extremely powerful jaw, being able to bite through any prey and drag it.

Although the jaguar is often confused with the leopard, it is considerably sturdier and heavier than its African cousin, and it has a rounder head. The rosettes are also different, being larger, sometimes darker, and fewer in number; the contours are thicker and there is a small spot in the center. Each animal has a unique coat pattern, like finger prints. The head and neck generally have solid spots instead of rosettes; and the same happens on the tail, where they may merge and form a ring.

Females are usually 10 to 20% smaller than males, but the smallest male recorded weighed only 36 Kg, and the largest male 158 Kg. Sizes vary according to regions and habitats. The largest jaguars occur in open flood plains areas, in Venezuela and Brazil, and the smallest jaguars are found in the dense forests of Central America.