0 a large wild animal of the cat family that lives in Central and South America --
1 a large, wild cat of Central and South America with black spots --
Jaguar's motor car production is about 49,000 cars.
Jaguar is now in public ownership and has absorbed much of the taxpayers' money as well as management time.
Gone for ever will be the jaguars and black panthers, most of the parrot family and a host of other animals, birds and insects.
They include lions, tigers, leopards, jaguars and pumas, but all but two animals were at large for only one day.
The forest and wetland ecosystems contain more than 800 species of trees, 500 species of birds, and large populations of mammals, including monkeys, jaguars, and tapirs.
True lordship, as one sees, was expressed not only in such status symbols as jaguar and puma thrones, but also in the privilege to per form auto-sacrificial rituals of fasting.
Most of the lithic use-wear evidence indicates meat and hide processing, and an almost complete jaguar skeleton recovered here, with several bones (particularly metapodials) marked by skinning, suggests hide removal.
As mentioned earlier, the empty jaguar throne is placed directly above this figure in the first register, together with a diverse series of warriors.