Until today, this was the sad story of Macho B, the last known wild jaguar in our country:

The jaguar was snared by accident south of Tucson Feb. 18. Wildlife agents decided to
strap it with a radio collar to study its movements. Then they noticed the jaguar
behaving strangely for 12 days, so they recaptured it, to see if it could be
helped somehow. Then wildlife vets decided the jaguar had suffered kidney failure,
and they euthanized it March 2.

And this has been the controversial question: Did the
jaguar’s handling by people — the snaring and radio-collaring — stress the
jaguar enough to contribute to its death?

Since the death, there’s been a swell of public sentiment
that may lead to more effort to preserve habitat for wild jaguars.

Now, the Arizona Daily Star reports a new controversy that may make Macho B’s story even sadder:

A pathologist, Sharon Dial, at the University of Arizona
Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, has examined
tissue samples from the jaguar, and she says the jaguar’s kidneys may have been
OK and the jaguar may have been euthanized by mistake.

… Bloodwork (that) state Game and Fish officials said
showed “off the charts” kidney failure could actually have indicated
dehydration, said Sharon Dial of the veterinary lab.

The (Phoenix Zoo vets) should have kept the animal on
intravenous fluids for 24 to 48 hours before euthanizing it, Dial said. State
Game and Fish officials and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials agreed to
euthanize the animal about five hours after he first got fluids …

“Nothing is absolute. There is nothing to say that he
absolutely would have recovered, but I can say by looking at the kidneys that
there is no structural reason why he would not have,” Dial said last week.
“… (Macho B) had damned good looking kidneys.”

The update, by Tony Davis at the Star — you may need to register to see it — carries
the headline:

“Did Macho B Have to Die?”

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