-
Spin woes, injury and poor form dog Australia for T20 World Cup
-
Japan's Liberal Democratic Party: an election bulldozer
-
Hazlewood out of T20 World Cup in fresh blow to Australia
-
Japan scouring social media 24 hours a day for abuse of Olympic athletes
-
Bangladesh Islamist leader seeks power in post-uprising vote
-
Rams' Stafford named NFL's Most Valuable Player
-
Japan to restart world's biggest nuclear plant
-
Japan's Sanae Takaichi: Iron Lady 2.0 hopes for election boost
-
Italy set for 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony
-
Hong Kong to sentence media mogul Jimmy Lai on Monday
-
Pressure on Townsend as Scots face Italy in Six Nations
-
Taiwan's political standoff stalls $40 bn defence plan
-
Inter eyeing chance to put pressure on title rivals Milan
-
Arbeloa's Real Madrid seeking consistency over magic
-
Dortmund dare to dream as Bayern's title march falters
-
PSG brace for tough run as 'strange' Marseille come to town
-
Japan PM wins Trump backing ahead of snap election
-
AI tools fabricate Epstein images 'in seconds,' study says
-
Asian markets extend global retreat as tech worries build
-
Sells like teen spirit? Cobain's 'Nevermind' guitar up for sale
-
Thailand votes after three prime ministers in two years
-
UK royal finances in spotlight after Andrew's downfall
-
Diplomatic shift and elections see Armenia battle Russian disinformation
-
Undercover probe finds Australian pubs short-pouring beer
-
Epstein fallout triggers resignations, probes
-
The banking fraud scandal rattling Brazil's elite
-
Party or politics? All eyes on Bad Bunny at Super Bowl
-
Man City confront Anfield hoodoo as Arsenal eye Premier League crown
-
Patriots seek Super Bowl history in Seahawks showdown
-
Gotterup leads Phoenix Open as Scheffler struggles
-
In show of support, Canada, France open consulates in Greenland
-
'Save the Post': Hundreds protest cuts at famed US newspaper
-
New Zealand deputy PM defends claims colonisation good for Maori
-
Amazon shares plunge as AI costs climb
-
Galthie lauds France's remarkable attacking display against Ireland
-
Argentina govt launches account to debunk 'lies' about Milei
-
Australia drug kingpin walks free after police informant scandal
-
Dupont wants more after France sparkle and then wobble against Ireland
-
Cuba says willing to talk to US, 'without pressure'
-
NFL names 49ers to face Rams in Aussie regular-season debut
-
Bielle-Biarrey sparkles as rampant France beat Ireland in Six Nations
-
Flame arrives in Milan for Winter Olympics ceremony
-
Olympic big air champion Su survives scare
-
89 kidnapped Nigerian Christians released
-
Cuba willing to talk to US, 'without pressure'
-
Famine spreading in Sudan's Darfur, UN-backed experts warn
-
2026 Winter Olympics flame arrives in Milan
-
Congo-Brazzaville's veteran president declares re-election run
-
Olympic snowboard star Chloe Kim proud to represent 'diverse' USA
-
Iran filmmaker Panahi fears Iranians' interests will be 'sacrificed' in US talks
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.
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."
H.Darwish--SF-PST