Panthera
07/09/2026
Panthera Thailand protects wild cats of all sizes β and just because some of these felines are tiny doesnβt mean our effort is: researchers have set up more than 228 remote cameras and covered 300 square kilometers to study and conserve mainland clouded leopards, fishing cats and flat-headed cats.
Thailand's wild cats big and small have a future. This is how we're building it. π
Read the full story at: https://panthera.org/blog-post/building-future-thailands-wild-cats.
π·: Sebastian Kennerknecht, Panthera/DNP
06/27/2026
On a scale of wild cats, how are you feeling today? π
Drop your answer in the comments! Whether you're feeling fierce like a jaguar or elusive like an ocelot, we're working every day to ensure a future for wild cats and the vast landscapes they call home.
πΈ: Barry Rowan, Sebastian Kennerknecht Photography , Nick Garbutt Wildlife Photography , James Warwick, Nicolas Lagos/Panthera, Sergio Pitamitz Wildlife and Nature Photography / National Geographic , Nitish Madan
Deep in the Harrat of AlUla, our team is navigating some of the most rugged terrain on Earth β hiking up to 20 km a day to reach camera stations that no vehicle can access.
On these cliff faces, we're mounting Panthera cameras at the same locations used in our 2022 and 2023 surveys, so we can track real changes in Arabian leopard prey populations over time. On foot, we're also conducting structured counts of rock hyrax, a key leopard prey species that camera traps alone can't reliably detect.
In partnership with the Royal Commission for AlUla Commission for AlUla, every data point we collect builds the scientific case for Arabian leopard recovery in AlUla.
This year's team spans four countries β Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Malaysia, and South Africa β united by one of the world's most endangered cats. π
π·: Keshab Gogoi, RCU, Panthera
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